Hi. I am hoping to create a study group for the LSAT. If anyone is in the SoCal / Inland Empire area, I would love to connect and work together! I plan on taking the LSAT in April or June. Please let me know if you are interested!
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@k13lawwwwww I think the author is assuming that an increase in wildlife is a negative effect. But in this case it is not as the park's resources can support its population
Looking at where you are now with your PT's, focusing on learning conditional logic would probably be all you need to put you at 155-160 mark! I would focus on improving your LR
You can filter to do only questions that you got incorrect. These questions have so much value in our studies.
I would reserve the 6 fresh preptests as well for the months before your LSAT.
I'd say there is still value in taking those PT. So even 80% freshness is okay.
If you find that you are often deciding between 2 answers, and that you select the wrong answer during the PT, but then select the other one of the 2 (Aka the correct one) you had initially came down to during Blind review, then you might be falling for trap answer choices. If this is the case I would suggest learning the different traps test makers use, as well as looking at the 2 final answer choices more critically. For example, I used to choose the answer I felt was more relevant to the stimulus, but now I actively look for something wrong in every AC.
I would do drills in your problem areas until you are consistently getting 75% correct. At that point start doing timed sections.

Hi, I began my studying by reading the Loophole. That took me a month to complete as I took detailed notes and spent a lot of time with the book understanding conditional logic and assumptions. After that I spent about 7 weeks on the powerscore bibles (I would skip this however as I didn't find much of its material to be especially valuable to me). After those 2-3 months of just reading the books and occasional LR drilling, I began drilling on 7sage and attending like 6 live classes a week. I was doing drills mainly for about a month along with reviewing my wrong answers. I began focusing on timing after having about 75% accuracy on my drills. At this point I began doing timed LR sections. I was able to get my LR to a consistent -3. However, I realized my RC was in desperate need of attention and I have spent the last month focusing on RC simply by attending Live RC Classes and doing RC drills, as well as going through the entire RC curriculum on 7sage. Now my times RC sections are at -5/-7 just from doing that.
I have increased my diagnostic score from a 153 to 166 in that time. Being that we have 2 weeks to register for the June LSAT, I think you would most benefit from focusing on the August LSAT. Also, it is very important to remain consistent with your studying. try not to become discouraged if your score does not increase automatically. Good luck :)