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I agree with you Royaimani that their type 2 question techniques were very helpful. The other benefit for me personally was that signing up for the course forced me to dedicate more time to this endeavor (I work 50+ randomly placed hrs a week and was finding it hard to buckle down). I saw a 16 point increase in my score, but I'd like to improve more. Outside of TM, the single most helpful thing for me has been 7sage's "fool proof guide to perfection on logic games." TM pushes you to complete as many problems as possible ("if you do all the work, you'll see gains"), but 7sage's fool proof guide advocates for honing in on a specific game you struggle with and completing it as many times as it takes until you master it. As a result, I find that the deductions become memorized and then I'm able to apply them to other games.
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Like @, I can relate as well. It sounds like we've invested similar time and effort, to see very similar results. I've worked so hard, especially over the last two months. I study at least 3.5 hrs/day, with only 1 day of "rest" per week (on my off day I may spend an hr or two reading lsat blogs, finding new resources, miscellaneous LSAT related things). Over the past 60 days, I've ONLY been working on logic games, my weakness. And I bet if I were to take a practice test tomorrow, I wouldn't see an improvement. But you know what? That's OK. I trust in myself, the work I'm putting in, the great resources I'm using like 7sage, and in the process of always seeking the best and most effective ways of studying. I know I wouldn't see improvement on a test immediately because it still takes me 15-30 mins to solve some logic games but guess what: that's so much better than where I started, which was not even being able to FINISH a lot of games. You can't motivate yourself entirely on fear and worry--celebrate your victories, even the small ones!! Best of luck,
Andrew
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http://classic.7sage.com/how-to-get-a-perfect-score-on-the-logic-games/