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i need a lobotomy after this one <3
In my view, the challenge with doing full practice tests in the middle of your curriculum is that you will very likely encounter question types that you're unfamiliar with during those tests. While this could be a welcome and healthy challenge, it could also be a waste of fresh test questions. Remember that there are only so many published, full-length practice tests, so you (generally) want to try your best to leverage those untouched questions as efficiently as possible. For me, this meant waiting until I had a good understanding of the whole curriculum before proceeding to full tests. Thankfully, the curriculum includes a few practice tests once you've completed the core, so you can jump right in and develop your own weekly prep test routine.
All this being said, I suppose it ultimately depends on your timeline for taking the LSAT and/or applying to law school. If you plan to take the August administration, I say go for it, take both the curriculum and prep tests simultaneously. If you have more time, I'd focus on deeply understanding the curriculum and developing good habits before taking full-length tests. Perhaps as a compromise, you could take a full practice test alongside the curriculum, see how it feels, and calibrate from there. Wishing you the best of luck in your studies.
if ur reading this i believe in u <3
Does anyone have a suggestion for where to write our low-res summary? Are y'all just writing yours on a piece of scratch paper? I'd love to be able to write next to and on the text like the instructors.
#feedback I would love if you could either copy and paste text into test question comment sections, or create your own template for wrong answer choices. In BR, I personally write out my responses to each answer, from A through E, and it would save me some time in BR if I could use my own wrong answer template.