I'm trying to print out some drilling sets and it looks like there is no way to do it anymore. Did 7Sage remove the printing feature or am I missing something?
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Just did this today, you'd have to make two different drill sets. I just had them on different tabs. The real LSAT gives you a minute between sections anyway.
Hey all,
I still haven't found a study partner yet, so if you're looking for one leave a comment on here. I don't care what range you're scoring at, we can both help each other learn either way.
Hi everybody,
I'm looking for a study partner who has some familiarity with the test, and is ideally (but you don't have to be) somewhere around the 160s score range. I'm trying to make that leap into the 170s, and hope we could help each other do so.
I'm in Laramie, Wyoming so I'm doubting there will be anyone in my area lol, but we can meet over zoom, skype or something similar.
I was thinking we could both take the same PT each week, blind review it separately, then meet each weekend to review the test together, and help one another learn from missed questions. We could do this during the week with timed sections as well, or even with tough questions from drilling. Or anything else you would have in mind!
Please reach out if you're interested! Let's crush this test.
Just took my first LSAT in November and was very disappointed with my score, feeling like it didn't represent my abilities on this test. My PT average leading up to the test was a 166-167, and I scored a 166 on PT158 (under normal test day conditions) just 2 days prior to taking the LSAT. I ended up scoring a 158 on the real exam.
I will need to be a super splitter candidate to get into the law schools I want to due to a lower (but upward trending) GPA, and need a 170+ score. I'm willing to spend however long it takes to reach that point.
So do you think I should cancel my score as it was a whole 8-9 points under my PT average, or should I keep it?
I would appreciate any feedback!
Probably not the answer you want to hear, but just doing a ton of flaw questions. Just hammering out a lot of flaw drill sets turned them from my worst question type to where I now rarely miss one. They can get very cookie cutter and predictable too.