Lets buckle down and start studying 3-5 hrs a day.
DM me!! Let's get a little group started to keep eachother accountable.
#help is it necessary to draw out conditional statements? I feel like they make me do so much work and require me to do so much extra thinking, I am more likely to get the question correct if I just go right from the stimulus to the answer choices with everything fresh in my head
I heard a restock is coming soon on Amazon. like in the next week or so
Not to be "that person" but am I the only one annoyed of all the unnecessary swearing? I have used like a million programs for law firms I've worked at, school, tests, LSAT preps and have never seen so much swearing...gives me the ick. #feedback
I know you have a full time job but you'll want to pump up your studying to 5-6 hours a day if you want to take the April. Finish the curriculum here in 7Sage. I'm with you-- I have a full time job, I'm currently taking a full load of courses at my college so I study whatever hours I have left in the day and wake up earlier to make sure I squeeze everything in. Last few weeks I have been studying 7-8 hours. Yesterday I studied from 10 am to midnight with breaks in between. Best way to have success is to deserve it.
If you are taking June, buy the reading comp hero Boot Camp. It is literally the best thing I’ve ever seen for reading comp. I think it’s like a two week Boot Camp. I took about a month to complete it but it was a very informative and it increased my score big time
Lets buckle down and start studying 3-5 hrs a day.
DM me!! Let's get a little group started to keep eachother accountable.
I am interested! Lets get a chat started on Viber or something!!!
I love this but the 3 years part scares me ahhhh.
THANK YOU ALL (3(/p)
People on Reddit or this forum will mention that they drill a section but I wonder if they just use LawHub or something. On 7Sage there's more of an emphasis to drill question types but I don't want to muddy up the practice tests. I'm shocked that it's so difficult find this feature?
This is a good question and this exact thing is why I think people should actually start the curriculum when they can actually attack a lot of it at once as opposed to dragging it out for a year. I think going through the curriculum and doing practice tests, drills and what not will make it so that you don't forget what you learned because you're applying it to the questions. This program is really dense but I think there's a pro in it that its getting concreted into your brain but the con is if you aren't applying your knowledge and are dragging out the curriculum, you'll probably forget what you learned.
I see people say they "drill sections" but it doesn't even look like 7Sage has the option of drilling an entire section without actually opening up a whole test. How would I drill, for example, an LR section from an actual test? How do you (person reading this) do it? I get that there are filters on the Practice > Drills but I don't want just random questions with tags, I want to drill a legit section for a test to make sure I don't muddy up a bunch of tests if that makes sense.
interested. Please dm.