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jrriojas25449
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Monday, Sep 28 2020

jrriojas25449

177 & 3.72, T5?

Thanks to J.Y. I was able to get a 177 on the LSAT which is huge because I only have a 3.72 GPA. I was wondering if I realistically had a chance at any top 5 school? I attended an unranked state school so my GPA really shouldn’t be that bad. The “predictor” gives me a pretty good shot, but I guess I was mainly wondering if I would be hurt by the fact that my school lacks prestige. Thanks so much for your help.

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PT134.S2.Q7
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jrriojas25449
Sunday, Jul 26 2020

I keep struggling on MSS when I feel like there is no necessarily correct answer. On my first pass, I couldn't get over the fact that in order for A to be correct I had to make an assumption. I understand now that it is certainly the most correct answer choice. I had crossed out every answer choice twice then selected E to not waste too much time. I feel like I am either a) always missing an early LR question that I should get right or b) spending way too much time on an early LR question, especially on LR.

#help should I have taken the extra minute to get this right? Or, does someone have advice on how to not get test-jitters at the beginning of the test/ overcome these weird trend? My goal is to miss only one on LR.

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jrriojas25449
Sunday, Jul 26 2020

I have been taking PTs as I take the course because I got 7Sage less than a month ago and I'm taking it in August. If you have more time than I do, you probably don't have to take any. I ran myself into the ground taking too many practice tests (about 5 in a week) without doing enough of the Core Curriculum. It was ineffective because my score actually went down. I did it so I could have some idea of what question types I need to focus on but instead it just depressed me.

That being said, I recently did a full week without taking a PT, then took a test. First of all, I improved from both my mid-burnout and pre-burnout scores. More importantly, I found myself able to thoroughly review the LR questions I had missed. Because JY's suggestions/teachings were fresh in my brain, I felt like I was able to commit the corrections to muscle memory. Time will tell if that is an accurate assessment.

My final thought on this is to be fair to yourself. If you just finished MSS let's say, don't be upset if you miss two MSS on the test. Either they happened to be excessively difficult, you got distracted, or there is a flaw in your approach. No matter which it is, it can be more helpful to miss a question than to get one right with the right approach. I kept beating myself up for missing questions in a section I had just completed, without taking into account the fact that were full difficulty or at the end of a section that I was running out of time for. But alas, what do I know. I'm just a struggling college student.

TLDR: Go for it, just don't take a shit ton

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