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laurencperry15119
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laurencperry15119
Wednesday, Jul 22 2020

@ said:

@ said:

I surfed around a bit, and according to people's reply on reddit, it's not possible/not allowed. Knew it was too good to be true..

I heard of people taking the July Flex in Asia tho, and it seems their scores were not cancelled or anything.

There was an international LSAT scheduled for July 2020 that was converted to a Flex, so people in Europe, Asia, etc. could take that exam

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laurencperry15119
Thursday, Aug 13 2020

I think there is a way to do this — if you click the clock, there's a dropdown menu with options to decrease or increase the amount for time for the whole test (and thus each section).

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laurencperry15119
Saturday, Oct 03 2020

I've experienced this too! I think this might be a case of burnout or overthinking. I'm sure you're familiar with burnout, but studing intensely or over a long period of time can exhaust you physically or mentally, leading you to do worse. Or, once you start scoring at quite high levels and get familiar with the test, you can start really overthinking things and not trusting the good habits you've built/overintellectualize your approach to the test.

The solution to both of these is the same: take some time off, and don't do anything related to the LSAT. When you come back, you'll be fresh and probably scoring better!

Of course, another consideration is that your test is only a week away, there's also the psychological worry about how not studying is going to affect it/how much you'll forget/being slower come test day and only you know what's more important to you on test day (feeling well-practiced vs. feel well-rested). A compromise solution might be just to do less studying (max 1 section a day), as you clearly have practiced the stamina to do a full LSAT-flex.

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