Honestly this LSAT journey was an extremely uphill one. I just wanted to share and hopefully encourage others to not give up. (lengthy and more about mindset)
THANK YOU 7SAGE!!!!! During this time, I've tried the LSAT Trainer, the Powerscore Bibles, and skimmed through Manhattan Prep before I got 7sage in July 2020. 7sage worked best for me. I'd really suggest taking advantage of the analytics to get a solid baseline in the beginning and target drilling your weak spots. My initial weaknesses were logic games, then after I got better using the foolproof method and just drilling, I focused on logical reasoning (I used the Trainer and 7 sage for this), and my RC ALWAYS fluctuated (like -2 one day to -11on another). RC was the hardest for me to learn. I used the drills on 7sage and read articles on The New Yorker regularly. Targeted drills were really helpful to me. Sometimes I'd actually purposefully do my drills in noisy places, where my sister was watching Netflix or whatever, to get used to keeping calm despite distractions. Keeping calm during the test (in spite of distractions) and having peace with myself is what helped me the most. If you have any specific questions lmk and I'll try my best to answer! :)
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Congratulations and thank you for sharing. Could you walk us through your timeline? For example, when did you start studying and for how many hours per week. Thank you in advance!
Hi yes! Studying for the July 19 test, I tried studying around 35 hrs/week from mid May to July, but I didn't have a plan and in hindsight, that's when I was learning to get the basics and it was all over the place (I used the Powerscore LR and LG books). Before May, I would TRY to study after work for 1-3hrs/day, but my brain was so spent from work, it wasn't the best quality.
Studying for the Oct 19 test, I started mid August to October 2019; I was working part time, studying part time, maybe around 20-25 hrs/week (Monday-Saturday). Midway through this period, I discovered the BR process and 7sage's method for logic games. I think that was when their videos were still free.
Studying for the Oct 20 test, I took time off work to concentrate entirely on the LSAT from July to October, studying about 45+ hrs/week. The burnout was real. When I started studying for the November test, I only studied for the latter two to three weeks, about 7-13 hr/week, after work. Hope this helps!