Self-study
elroyhouse148388
- Joined
- Apr 2025
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LSAT
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Take a break and then start preparing for the test once when your mind is fresh again.I read a blog online from Matt Capoccia who scored 180 for his LSAT.He first took a diagnostic LSAT and he scored a 166 and then about eight months later he got a notification mail from LSAC saying that he scored about 180.His study plan followed three phases, the first one was mastering the basics of LSAT,then improving speed and then finally building stamina.I am planing on doing a paralegal studies program in cestar college (http://www.cestarcollege.com/courses/law-programs/paralegal/) and I am preparing for the LSAT too,though I am not sure which is the right place to begin.Though logic games count only one quarter of your LSAT score it is better that you master it.Mastering the basics would mostly include Logical reasoning and Reading comprehension.Once when you are sure that you are comfortable to work with the untimed sections you can start doing individual sections under timed conditions.Ideally you should have atleast 5-8 months to prepare for the LSAT.