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darienmaxwell160
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darienmaxwell160
Tuesday, Aug 27 2024

Yes! I am

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darienmaxwell160
Tuesday, Aug 27 2024

I think its better safe than sorry and the admissions person that will be reading it will be more impressed by someone who did include a citation versus someone who plagiarized information. I also was wondering this for my own admissions essay, and I'm just going to include a simple MLA citation. It is better to wow them and be over the top, in my opinion, than to end up getting points docked from your essay because of a simple issue like citation.

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darienmaxwell160
Friday, Mar 22 2024

Depends on what your goals are! I know some people are on here for several hours drilling and watching the syllabus videos and live videos.

I personally am starting with the guided syllabus videos, I study for two hours a day when I can, and when I start getting bored of the videos during my study session I do a couple drills, and switch. I am planning on watching the recorded live videos, once I have completed the videos of the syllabus. Those videos are a little tougher, to me, so its a good stepping stone. Also, I will focus more on the areas that I struggle in, watching those live classes first.

When it comes to drilling ALWAYS flag the questions you are not 100% confident of the answer and do blind review before showing the results of your drill. Go in and write on the wrong answer template under the answer choices, under the questions you flagged, and figure out why you thought this answer was correct OR why you changed your mind and are now choosing a new answer. This helped me SO so much. Once you show results, go back in and use the wrong answer template under the answer choices and reread the question, figure out why you got it wrong, and write that down. If you are still confused, click on the explanation video!

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darienmaxwell160
Wednesday, Mar 20 2024

I am surprised that only one person has commented on this! I am still in undergrad and finishing up my classes in May. I am also a full time stay at home mom on top of that. AND I am studying for the lsat to take it in August!

I wake up early before my baby, and study uninterrupted for 2 ish hours a day, sometimes, when I dont meet my time requirement I just do it at night when I am done with everything else.

It can be brutal to juggle everything, but it is definitely possible. You find times throughout the day, wake up a little bit earlier if you're able, when your mind is fresh, and do some drills then.

A big help for me actually was putting a limit on tiktok and social media, we dont realize how much time we waste on social media until we put it down and utilize that time.

Finding little times in the day to practice a 15 minute drill is a big help too (during lunch break, after work, when work is dead, in between classes) you can always print out old tests and drills and practice those whenever you have time!

Be aware of your mental health, do not burn out! I always have a break day, where I do nothing, and I take a PT once every two weeks.

We can reach our LSAT goals, we just have to become expert time and priority jugglers.

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