The current online LSAT obviously has four sections and one is unscored.
If I don't "simulate modern" on 7Sage PrepTests does it score my test like the modern LSAT (with one section unscored) or does it score the 4th section?
@patch0598409 Thanks!! I want to take all 4 sections too, also to get in the habit and increase my mental stamina, but do not want to have to calculate my score minus one section each time. Knowing this is helpful!! I would think 7sage would have made it as similar to the real one as possible.
The current online LSAT obviously has four sections and one is unscored.
If I don't "simulate modern" on 7Sage PrepTests does it score my test like the modern LSAT (with one section unscored) or does it score the 4th section?
@paigebarsukov876 thank you for this!!! I really really appreciate anyones thoughts/advice on this and hearing what worked for them!!
Ratios confusing the hell out of me. I would have gotten this right but had my analysis of large and small ratios switched
I chose E and only just now, while watching this explanation video, see that is says "received from OUTSIDE North America" ...... ugh
@jhaldy10325 I appreciate this, thank you!
I am trying to fine tune my LR, and most advice i see is to study the questions types you struggle with, but after looking over my analytics all the LR questions I'm getting wrong are pretty evenly distributed between all question types.
My consistently wrong answers are the ones that are ranked as 4-5 level difficulty. What exactly should I do for that? Just take drill sets of hard questions over and over and over?
I just realized that 7sage has an automatic drill building function where you can create drills of LR, RC, or LG and filter by type of question. It tells you how many clean questions you have to draw from for each question type.
My concern: does it draw clean questions from PT's 35+ ??? I don't want to use questions from future PT's I might do, but want to build sets of certain question types and that seems easiest to do with this function.
#help
What are peoples strategies for marking up a passage?
Do you use the different highlight colors + the underline tool for different, specific types of information?
I've just started studying RC and am trying to come up with as system for marking up passages that makes it easier to go back and find info when I'm on the questions. I am curious as to what worked for others.
As of now, all I have is that I am going to underline time indicators. (Such as: before, after, until recently, now, back then, previously, etc.)
I know some people feel like it could be a time suck, but I have such a hard time being engaged with the passages I think using the tools will make me actively think about what information falls into what category and how it all fits together. I'd love others' input on this as well.
Lmfao I chose C over D because I read the ending of each of them and was like (in regards to AC D) "well you can't conclude that most people have vivid imaginations just from the people who read this book"
Major face palm moment...........