User Avatar
klugemma7
Joined
Apr 2025
Subscription
Free
User Avatar
klugemma7
Wednesday, Feb 24 2021

@ said:

Over the 2 to 3 the years when I was in and out of study, I felt like the negativity would only snowball my self-limiting beliefs. If you are feeling burnt out, and you say you have time, then give yourself more time. Nothing is more depressing to your score than the mindset behind the approach.

Thanks so much for this insight! I'm really going to try to implement your advice as I continue my studies.

Hi all,

With today being the last day to sign up for April, I'm questioning If I should be signing up. April was my original goal date to take the LSAT. However, I've been studying since July 2020, and my score has been stuck at 157 for the last couple of months. I'm about seven years out of undergrad, and I work full time at a pretty busy, deadline-driven job. I generally study about an hour to an hour and a half each day. I have a 3.2 from undergrad, and I am hoping to get at least a 165 on the LSAT.

Given all this, is it reasonable to think that I could jump from a 157 to a 165 by the April 2021 LSAT date? Now that I've signed up for 7 Sage and am using the Powerscore books, I'm approaching studying a little differently. (Before this, I worked through the LSAT Trainer and old practice tests). I plan to apply for next year's cycle, so I still have time take other tests. But I also don't want to spend another four months studying If it's not necessary since I'm feeling kind of burnt out from juggling everything.

I also want to know how you knew when you were ready to take the test? Were you scoring where you wanted to when you signed up?

Confirm action

Are you sure?