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laurenkjacobsen442
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laurenkjacobsen442
Tuesday, Oct 29 2019

Thanks everyone for your comments. I took the test yesterday. They showed us a tutorial before the test which shows how to use the tablet. Pretty straightforward and easy to use.

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laurenkjacobsen442
Tuesday, Sep 17 2019

Idk, I would still take every section seriously because you never know. Plus you don't want to rely on your memory, you could have seen a similar question in a section prior, not on a prior lsat test. The test is so mentally draining that it's very hard to keep track of every question.

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laurenkjacobsen442
Sunday, Sep 15 2019

I've taken the LSAT twice and both times there was a LR question straight from an old reading comp. passage. Both times that section was my ungraded LR section.

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laurenkjacobsen442
Monday, May 11 2020

That's awesome! thanks for sharing that book. I am googling it rn. Good luck with the test. Keep posting in this thread, I like communicating with people in my age group :)

I'm used to taking lsats on paper where I can cross out wrong answer choices. Does the digital test allow you to mark up the test? For LG, i've been writing out a,b,c,d,e on a piece of scrap paper, but I feel like writing these letters out is time consuming. Any tips for taking the digital lsat? How different is the digital test is from the original test?

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laurenkjacobsen442
Sunday, Feb 07 2021

C to me reads as an incorrect inference answer.

I would edit the first sentence to read. "Most of those opposed to cruelty work in labs."

Most implies some, so C would be a correct inference

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laurenkjacobsen442
Sunday, Feb 07 2021

This happened to me. I got better in one section only to get worse in another. I'm not sure how you're studying. I found once I learned LG, it's a practice it or forget it skill. If I work on a LR section, then before I'm done for the day, I'll do a game or two. That seems to be enough practice for me.

Likewise you could do one RC passage and 3-4 LR questions a day to stay tip top.

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laurenkjacobsen442
Wednesday, Feb 03 2021

I started studying 2 years ago with Princeton review and khan. Then I switched to 7sage. In all that time I stayed in the same score range. 150-155. My first PT was 150. I was defeated. I think I watched the core videos 4-5 times.

All that to say. I didn’t see a lot of score improvement. I was in the habit of taking test timed. BR. And watching explanation video that made the question seem super easy. Gave me lots of confidence. I’ll get it right next time. Only to not get it right next time. And not improve.

So I quit learning. I stopped watching the explanations and went to task doing the lsat exam. In sections one by one Un-timed.

I think I spend 45minutes-2hrs finishing a section.

So from 2/3 mnths ago when I started doing only practice tests to now, I’ve reached 161 Jan flex exam.

In conclusion, If like me, you don’t feel you’re improving, try something new. Find a way that works for you because this 7sage method isn’t for everyone. Timed test and BR wasn’t for me.

And to tack on to another comment. I’ve read loophole. It was good.

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laurenkjacobsen442
Monday, Mar 02 2020

I too score in the 150s, and I'm probably confident about 5/26 questions in LR and 4/26 in RC. It's been difficult for me to learn anything doing blind review. It feels like I need to just relearn everything in CC. I really enjoy hearing that I'm not the only one taking my time studying for the LSAT. Someone mentioned the economist. I found helping my sibling with their law school h.w. by briefing some cases helped me quite a bit to really start thinking like a lawyer, and spotting the important stuff in the readings. Plus my law vocabulary is increasing

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