I don't really care for the lessons much tbh, but my learning style is definitely more "do" rather than "listen."
I personally grind out the drills every weekday for a few hours. At the end of the day, I review each of my incorrect or "marked for review" questions; logging them into an excel sheet on what went wrong, why my answer choice was incorrect, and why the correct answer choice was correct.
On Friday, I watch lessons on the subject matters that I had incorrect answers on (assuming the mistake was due to a gap in knowledge rather than a simple execution error).
On Saturday and Sunday, I take a 2 full prep tests on each day with a test-setting.
Rinse and repeat until I take my final LSAT :)
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I don't really care for the lessons much tbh, but my learning style is definitely more "do" rather than "listen."
I personally grind out the drills every weekday for a few hours. At the end of the day, I review each of my incorrect or "marked for review" questions; logging them into an excel sheet on what went wrong, why my answer choice was incorrect, and why the correct answer choice was correct.
On Friday, I watch lessons on the subject matters that I had incorrect answers on (assuming the mistake was due to a gap in knowledge rather than a simple execution error).
On Saturday and Sunday, I take a 2 full prep tests on each day with a test-setting.
Rinse and repeat until I take my final LSAT :)