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Sanique Rowe
Student Services
Joined
Jan 2025
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Sanique Rowe
Friday, Oct 31

Hi there, I totally understand! I've logged this feedback for our team—if anything changes, we’ll let you know!

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Sanique Rowe
Saturday, Oct 25

Thanks so much for the suggestion—this is a great idea, and I’ll be sure to pass the feedback along to our team!

In the meantime, you can manually calculate your accuracy for each difficulty level by using the filters on your question table. Here’s how:

  1. Go to your Priorities page and click “Show X questions” for the tag you're curious about.

  2. Use the Difficulty filter to select a specific level (e.g., Medium).

  3. Once filtered, you’ll see how many questions you've answered at that level, and how many you got correct.

  4. To calculate the percentage accuracy:

    Correct ÷ Total Matches × 100

Please see the sample GIF below, which shows a quick example of how you can calculate the accuracy for a diffulty level.

I hope this helps!

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Sanique Rowe
Friday, Oct 24

Hi there, great question! Your priorities update in real time and are based on your performance across all types of practice—full PrepTests, drills, and individual sections. That said, the impact depends on how many questions you've completed and how well you’ve done, so the priorities may not shift immediately.

Also, you can choose what gets included in your priorities from your settings, as seen in the screenshot below:

I hope this helps!

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Sanique Rowe
Wednesday, Oct 22

Hey! Thanks so much for this thoughtful suggestion! I’ve passed your feedback along to our team. 😊 Let us know if anything else comes to mind!

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Sanique Rowe
Edited Saturday, Nov 22

Hi there,

I totally understand your concern, and I'd be happy to clarify!

No need to worry, your progress and data on 7Sage are saved to your 7Sage account and won’t be lost when your LawHub subscription expires.

That said, when your LawHub Advantage subscription expires, you won’t be able to access licensed LSAT questions on 7Sage until you renew it. Once that's done, you’ll regain full access—your progress, analytics, and all your work will still be right where you left them.

If you need any assistance renewing your LawHub Advantage subscription, feel free to reach out to us at studentservice@7sage.com. We’ll guide you through it!

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Sanique Rowe
Tuesday, Oct 21

Hi there, thanks for flagging this! Our team is aware of the issue and is working on a fix as we speak. We'll provide you with an update as soon as possible!

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Sanique Rowe
Friday, Nov 21

Hi there,

We recently updated our digital tester to better reflect the format you'll see on the official LSAT. The goal is to give students a practice environment that closely matches what they’ll experience on test day.

That said, I'm so sorry to hear that it makes it difficult to read. To resolve this, it may be helpful to try adjusting the text size and line space as seen in the sample GIF below:

We hope this helps you feel even more prepared, but if you're still finding this change unhelpful, please don’t hesitate to let us know; we truly value your feedback!

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Sanique Rowe
Tuesday, Oct 21

Thanks so much for the suggestion—this totally makes sense. I’ve logged your feedback with our team! 😊 Let us know if there’s anything else you’d love to see added or improved.

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Sanique Rowe
Tuesday, Oct 21

Hey, so sorry for the trouble! I wasn’t able to replicate this, as the Contact Support button works as intended on my end.

I just sent you a message via chat—when you have a moment, please check if you’re able to see and respond to it. If not, no worries! You can always reach us directly at studentservice@7sage.com, and we’ll be happy to help from there. 😊

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Sanique Rowe
Friday, Nov 21

Hi there,

That's right! We recently updated our digital tester to better reflect the format you'll see on the official LSAT. The goal is to give students a practice environment that closely matches what they’ll experience on test day.

We hope this helps you feel even more prepared! That said, if there’s anything about the change that feels confusing or unhelpful, please don’t hesitate to let us know; we’re always happy to assist.

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Sanique Rowe
Edited Tuesday, Oct 21

Hi there,

We can recommend questions for blind review if you got them incorrect, skipped them, flagged them, spent too much time on them, or answered them too quickly. This means the questions recommended for blind review can sometimes include ones you answered correctly within the target time.

Just a heads up: you have the option to turn off or adjust the blind review suggestions in your account settings.

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Sanique Rowe
Tuesday, Oct 21

Hey there,

This has now been fixed!

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Sanique Rowe
Friday, Nov 21

Hi there, could you send us an email at studentservice@7sage.com so we can take a closer look and help resolve the issue? Thanks so much for flagging it!

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Sanique Rowe
Sunday, Oct 19

Great question! If your subscription ends, all your analytics, notes, progress, and history are saved. When your subscription access expires, you'll be downgraded to a free trial account, which gives you access to a limited number of our resources. However, nothing gets deleted, and you can absolutely pick back up right where you left off later on, as long as you use the same email when reactivating. 😊

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Sanique Rowe
Tuesday, Nov 18

Hi there,

Thanks again for your thoughtful message! I took a close look at your screenshots and wanted to clarify both of your points:

1) Suggested timing inconsistency: You're right to notice what seems like a discrepancy between the individual question timings and the total timing summary.

From what I can see:

  • You spent 3:44 on the passage, which is listed as 1:45 over, meaning the target for the passage is 1:59.

  • You also spent 3:44 on the questions, and it says you're 0:51 under, which means the target for the questions is 4:35.

When you add those target times together (1:59 + 4:35), you get 6:34, but the system lists your total target time as 6:38.

This 4-second difference likely comes from backend rounding. The system calculates timing in seconds, but the times you see are displayed as rounded minute: second values. So even though it looks like the numbers don’t add up, it’s likely due to minor rounding at each step. Hope that clears it up a bit!

2) Too little time recommended for the passage: The "target time" is based on timing data from top-scoring students. It’s not a hard rule, but rather a helpful benchmark. It gives you a sense of how long a high scorer might have taken on each part. That said, different strategies work for different people! If you’ve found that spending a bit more time on the passage helps your retention and leads to better accuracy, that’s totally valid.

I hope this helps! Please let me know if you have any further questions or concerns.

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Sanique Rowe
Friday, Nov 14

I heard back from our Dev team, and here’s a quick explanation of what’s going on with the change in the priority tags:

We recently updated how our recommendations engine assigns priority tags (highest/medium/lowest) to make them more actionable for you.

What changed: Priority ratings are now relative to your performance across all question types, rather than absolute comparisons to your goal score.

Why we changed it: Under the old system, if you set a high goal score, nearly everything showed as "highest priority" (not helpful). If you set a lower goal score, everything showed as "lowest priority" (also not helpful). Now you'll always see a clear spread of priorities regardless of your goal score setting.

What hasn't changed: Your goal score still matters! It determines (1) how far you are from the percentage you need for each tag, and (2) the actual ordering of recommendations, since different question types perform differently at different score levels.

Bottom line: Your priority ratings may look different now, but they're actually more useful in showing you where to focus your study time relative to your current performance.

I hope this helps! Let us know if you have any questions.

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Sanique Rowe
Friday, Nov 14

Hi @, I heard back from our Dev team, and here’s a quick explanation of what’s going on with the change in priority tags:

We recently updated how our recommendations engine assigns priority tags (highest/medium/lowest) to make them more actionable for you.

What changed: Priority ratings are now relative to your performance across all question types, rather than absolute comparisons to your goal score.

Why we changed it: Under the old system, if you set a high goal score, nearly everything showed as "highest priority" (not helpful). If you set a lower goal score, everything showed as "lowest priority" (also not helpful). Now you'll always see a clear spread of priorities regardless of your goal score setting.

What hasn't changed: Your goal score still matters! It determines (1) how far you are from the percentage you need for each tag, and (2) the actual ordering of recommendations, since different question types perform differently at different score levels.

Bottom line: Your priority ratings may look different now, but they're actually more useful in showing you where to focus your study time relative to your current performance.

I hope this helps! Let us know if you have any further questions.

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Sanique Rowe
Friday, Nov 14

Hi there, we're currently looking into this and will provide you with an update as soon as possible!

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Sanique Rowe
Friday, Nov 14

Hi there, we're going to go ahead and look into this. We'll get back to you as soon as possible!

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Sanique Rowe
Thursday, Nov 13

Hi there,

Thanks for the suggestion! We don’t currently have different target times for student's with accomodations, but I definitly understand how that would be helpful! I’ve passed your feedback along to our team for consideration. Please feel free to keep the ideas coming 😊

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Sanique Rowe
Edited Tuesday, Nov 11

Thanks so much for the thoughtful feedback! We’re actually working on making the study plan more customizable, so your suggestions are super timely and helpful. We’ll be sure to let everyone know when we release any updates!

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Sanique Rowe
Saturday, Nov 08

Hey there! You’ll be happy to know that we’re already working on updates to make the study plan more flexible and modifiable. We completely understand how important it is for the plan to fit your real-life schedule and study habits, and we’re excited to make improvements in that direction.

Stay tuned, and thanks for helping us make 7Sage better!

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Sanique Rowe
Edited Friday, Nov 07

Great question! When you import PrepTests from LawHub into 7Sage, it only syncs your results, so you can benefit from our analytics and recommendation engine. Unfortunately, the Blind Review feature isn’t available for imported tests. ​

If you’d like to Blind Review, you’ll need to take the test directly on our website. That way, you’ll have access to both your timed score and the Blind Review functionality. ​

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Sanique Rowe
Friday, Nov 07

Hi there!

Thanks for checking in — there’s been a slight delay with our billing system this month, but your November charge will be processed soon. No action is needed on your end, and we appreciate your patience! Let us know if you have any other questions in the meantime.

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Sanique Rowe
Sunday, Nov 02

Good question! The “score of students with a 50% chance of getting this right” doesn’t mean what you personally should score to get it right — it’s describing the difficulty level of the question statistically.

For example, in the screenshot below: it means that students who score around 152 overall on the Preptest have about a 50% probability of answering this specific question correctly.

  • If your practice test average is below 152, odds are this question will be relatively hard for you.

  • If you’re above 152, odds are you’ll find it easier and get it right more often than not.

In conclusion, it’s simply a data point showing where this question sits on the difficulty curve relative to test-takers’ overall ability levels.

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