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crumb115279
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crumb115279
Thursday, Sep 06 2018

These are the breakdowns if that is what you are referring to:

Logic games: 17/25

reading comp: 19/25

analytical reasoning: 19/25

logical reasoning: 17/25

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crumb115279
Thursday, Sep 06 2018

@ said:

The wisdom of the forums @ @ have spoken to you. Furthermore, you didn't give us any information on what you didn't get right, only the end result of that exam. So we don't know your deficiencies are so we can give you the appropriate advice to tailor your study plans. Good luck though.

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crumb115279
Thursday, Sep 06 2018

Thank you for that! I obviously understand the pressure coming from family/any other relation. It's almost too much. But, ultimately it matters what is the best school to get in to and I believe, with some convincing and explaining, they will understand that. Good luck to you!

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crumb115279
Thursday, Sep 06 2018

I think a lot of people deal with the pressure from family/friends/partners. I wish I didn’t tell anyone I was studying. My partner still doesn’t understand why I didn’t take the feb test after December, then why I pushed back the summer tests to September. And he is also confused as to why I will keep studying after sept to (maybe) take November. Just stay on your own path and you’ll get to where you want to be!

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crumb115279
Thursday, Sep 06 2018

I'm a college student with a pretty simple work load since I am a senior and have finished most my required courses. I have upwards of 7+ hours to work with. Is that feasible in your opinion?

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crumb115279
Thursday, Sep 06 2018

@ said:

People have done it before but it really really depends on how easily you master the test. You'd have to be naturally really good at picking up the kind of thinking that the LSAT requires and you'd have to have tons of free time for studying between now and then. A lot of the LSAT isn't stuff that you're likely to just be "out of practice" in because most of it isn't stuff that's taught or focused on in high school/college. A 157 is a good cold score, and I think you could pretty easily get up to 165 by November, but the higher up in score you get the harder each point is to gain.

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Wednesday, Sep 05 2018

crumb115279

am i tripping? (november lsat)

Hello people! I took the June diagnostic LSAT and scored a 157 with absolutely no prep and haven been out of the standardized test game for about 4 years. I'm wondering if I start now will I be able to break 170s by the November test or if that is an unrealistic goal because my parents are pressuring me to apply for the next school year instead of taking time off. I felt while taking the LSAT that some of my problems were that I was just out of practice when it came to reading comprehension and reading things quickly with timing, etc. which could just be because I haven't had to do it since high school and that could be helped by just doing more practice and others were of course things like logic games which I have not seen before but didn't find to be absolutely unbearable (i actually find them very fun). Is this a completely unrealistic goal?

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