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jujubean96468
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jujubean96468
Wednesday, May 16 2018

@, congratulations on your baby! Unfortunately, I don't have all of the answers... my husband and I just try and do the best we can with scheduling intentional time that is strictly for each other, or housework, etc. However, if you figure out the secret, please share! ;) In all seriousness though, hats off to you for doing it all! Remember... this is temporary! You can do it!!

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jujubean96468
Wednesday, May 16 2018

@ said:

I'm in the exact same position as you. I have found that doing the LG and LR bundles from 1-59 have been a tremendous help. I also bought Velocity LSAT prep course and it has been super helpful. I'm up 12-14 points from my Sept 2017 score.

@, can you clarify on doing the LG and LR bundles from 1-59? Sorry, I'm not following and I don't see anything that mentions this in the syllabus. Thanks in advance!

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jujubean96468
Wednesday, May 16 2018

Thanks for the suggestions all! I need to go back and take a look at my strengths/weaknesses from my first test as mentioned above. That's a great starting point. I think I'll also try and take a PT this weekend and use that as a measure for current strengths/weaknesses. Good luck to you all.

Hi there,

SO I took the LSAT last June, did alright, actually have been accepted to schools and have accepted an offer to a school. My school is now paying for me to take the LSAT again so I am able to have the best possible score I am able to achieve. Better for their numbers, and they have incentivized it for me as well, pending my score increases by even just one point.

I took an LSAT prep class last spring in preparation for my first go at the LSAT (of course at the time, did not think I would ever in my right mind volunteer to take it again). Ultimately, I'm trying to find the best suggested way for a refresher course, without trying to spend 90 hours a week entirely completing this course. I just am at a loss for what I should be prioritizing my time with as I have basically exactly one month from today to prepare.

I had originally thought I would just sift through the different lessons and attempt to complete all of the ones that stuck out to me as relevant or that I thought would be more beneficial than others (which for the record, I'm sure that this course is ALL very helpful, and I don't mean to say any one lesson is more important than the next. I also understand for the best results, it's probably best to have sufficient time to finish the entire course... I'm just not working with that situation).

Does anyone have suggestions for where to start in order to refresh myself and be best prepared for a second shot at the LSAT? How should I prioritize my time to get the best bang for my buck, so to speak? Any information or advice would be so welcome as I feel like I'm drowning in lots and lots of LSAT material with no direction. Thank you all so much in advance!

P.S. I so wish I knew about this course a couple years ago when I was first studying for the LSAT... this site is crazy cool.

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