When I applied for undergrad, there was a huge emphasis on FAFSA. My question is, do I need to apply for FAFSA for Law School? Is it necessary? Do the FAFSA requirements vary from school to school? If I missed the deadline for this cycle for FAFSA and am in Law School, can I apply during the next cycle? Besides the LSAT, LSAC, CAS and actual school applications, is there anything else I should be applying for or keeping an eye out for?
PT Questions
adamarisv26741
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adamarisv26741
Tuesday, May 16 2023
Hello! I am in the same boat as you and Jamedola27. I just finished the Foundations and took PT June 2007. I have read a lot that it is best to follow the curriculum and take the PTs after completing it on many discussion boards, which I don't generally agree with, but everyone's journey is different. My thought process is that once I got to the LR and LG parts of the curriculum drilling a couple of questions after each lesson(s) may be better to help practice what I have learned instead of taking full practice tests. I think the drilling will be a better of gauge what was learned that week from studying and what needs more review. This is my plan at least and thought to share.
I am 26 and work full-time as a paralegal Mon - Fri 9 am - 530 pm. I try to study at lease 1 - 3 hour a day after work. I tried waking up earlier to study, but I am just not a morning person. You have to find what works best for you. I go through the core curriculum or Drill 5 - 6 questions and make sure I am blind reviewing, completeing the blind review and watching all the explanation videos. TBH meal prepping for the week has saved me some precious minutes after work! I come home, pop the meal in the microwave, wash the 2 dishes and after I am done and have taken a deep breath I am ready to study. I give myself Sunday's off to meal prep, prepare for the week ahead and just to get some space from the LSAT.