- Joined
- Apr 2025
- Subscription
- Free
I, too, work full-time, and must force myself through the drudgery of studying for as many hours as I can whenever I can find the time, despite being emotionally and physically drained, lol. I know the struggle.
First, my best advice for the motivation to study post-work is to start your day knowing that, no matter what, you are going to set aside at least an hour and a half to study once you get home. Planning for the time and keeping it in mind throughout the day makes it much easier for me to acquiesce to the fact that, once I'm home, it's time to get down to business before anything else. And by study, I mean, like, actually study -- not just organize your notes in your binder for an hour and then try to decide what to study for the remaining half hour (which is what I am prone to do lolol). I usually try to do at least one, hopefully two, practice test sections (just sections, not whole tests) every other day and Blind Review them, then make a mental summary of what I need to improve on, which I try to do the next day. Rinse, repeat. I find that, instead of skimming through things, breaking PTs off into digestible pieces makes it easier to do them thoroughly. If you reliably run into issues with a certain section, then I suggest printing a few different PTs and working on just the sections that present the most problems. Identify the question types that are messing with you, then brush up on the core curriculum/approaches to the questions. Make the time you have count.
And, most importantly, don't shame yourself if there are days you simply cannot bear to look at LSAT prep. You are a human and you're doing a great job. :-)
PS- Feel free to private message me if the 7sage curriculum isn't connecting with you in some areas. I have sooooo much LSAT prep that I am more than happy to pass along to you (or anyone else, for that matter). Good luck! (3(/p)
@ said:
@ said:
@-3 Only three sections are scored now.
So how should I convert my score after I finished 4 sections PT?
You have two options:
If you use 7sage to score your PTs, you opt to have it graded in Modern Format (there's a button to the right of the test's introductory information at the top of the page). Then it grades your PT on three sections only.
Otherwise, most PTs have a scoring key alongside the answer key. If you can't find one, Google never fails. There's likely some kind of formula floating around that you can plug your total right answers into and it'll sh*t a proper score out for you. But don't quote me.
Alright. We’re after the 9pm ET deadline. Let the speculation commence.
I got LG/LR/LR/RC. LG? Oddly easy AF. First LR was appropriately difficult; second LR seemed to be a walk in the park. RC was pretty average, but I had an Arts section w/ choices that were sometimes uncomfortably vague. Felt like I couldn’t be 100% sure about some of those answers.
Without mentioning specifics, there were a lot of MSS questions in the second section or LR. I am hoping the first LR was experimental (lol of course), but I guess we’ll just have to wait and see.