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nataliehberg153
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nataliehberg153
Wednesday, Mar 24 2021

It's a little different. If you log onto the LSAC Law Hub (LSAT Prep Plus), it will look exactly like those tests.

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nataliehberg153
Wednesday, Feb 10 2021

@ said:

Interesting - how much time do you tend to have for returning to the 2 or 3 questions skipped?

Usually about 4-6 minutes, depending on how many I skipped, and if there was a 26th q in the section. So that tends to give me ~2 min per skipped q. That's about how long I would've given them each up front, but I feel way less stressed spending that long if the rest of the questions are behind me.

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nataliehberg153
Tuesday, Feb 09 2021

I don't skip very often, maybe 2-3 per LR section. I tend to skip questions that I think will take a long time, especially if all the answers are long. For example, Parallel Flaw (pick the choice that most closely resembles the flawed logic of the stimulus), or if the stimulus is very long/uses specialized science language.

I try to decide within the first couple seconds if I'm going to skip or not, and then I commit.

If I'm skipping, I skim the stimulus and answer choices, pick something that seems reasonable enough, and move on within maybe 15 seconds, knowing I'll give the question the time it needs once I've gone through the whole section once.

If it's a tough one but I'm not skipping, that means I (probably) won't come back to it later, so I put in the time it takes to pick an answer I feel pretty good about and then move on. (I still flag it in case I have extra time.)

I very rarely skip during RC, but if I do it's when the question asks you to identify the analogous answer choice. I always skip these (skim and pick something that seems fine), and I usually don't have time to come back, so the random guess is worth it, since I know if I'd taken time with that question I wouldn't have finished at all.

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nataliehberg153
Tuesday, Apr 06 2021

Universally, law schools only consider your highest score. That's how it goes, period. My understanding is that taking the test twice is super common. So if you're not happy with your June score and you do a lot better in August, your June score doesn't matter anymore.

However, I don't really see a reason to take it in June if you don't feel ready. Personally I don't recommend that. There's not that much time between the June and August exams, so even if you learn a lot from how the June exam goes, you won't have that much time to use that information to help you prepare for August. What are your reasons for taking the test two months apart? I don't see any harm in it, but I don't see much benefit either.

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