hi, I am looking for people to discuss study strategies with and to hold each other accountable for studying. also open to studying together online or in person!
I am based in nyc and looking to take the LSAT for the second time in Feb, 2024.
Im interested!
I would like to join! I'm taking it for the 2nd time in Jan
I did both V1 and V2 - If you have the time, I would do both for LR. The V1 LR and V2 LR have slight differences that I think are both useful. I would do V1 LR first, then V2 LR to refresh and get anything you may have missed. You could skip V1 RC though because the RC portion of V2 is way better than V1.
im interested, please add me!
hi, I am looking for people to discuss study strategies with and to hold each other accountable for studying. also open to studying together online or in person!
I am based in nyc and looking to take the LSAT for the second time in Feb, 2024.
In the new LR curriculum, JY mentions the importance of thinking about the mode of reasoning before going into the answer choices. I know the basic modes of reasoning that we covered in depth (part to whole, cost-benefit, etc) but later in the video lessons, he mentions specific ones (trade-offs, unintended negative consequences, interdependence) that he only touches on when discussing the answer choices. For the harder questions with less common modes of logic, I find myself struggling with putting these modes of reasoning into words which makes it harder to see flaws/analogous arguments, so does anyone have any resources that can help me get familiar with them? Thanks in advance!
I currently work at a small law office in NYC. A couple of weeks ago, I got accepted into my dream law school and will be enrolling for fall 2025 so my position will be open starting April.
This role is a perfect opportunity for those preparing to go to law school. It is only part-time so you will be able to study for the LSAT or work on other application materials. Additionally, the role leaves a lot of free time during the work day to study for the LSAT or work on other application materials as well. Another amazing thing about this role is that because you are working in a small law office, there is a lot of room for growth and learning. I truly believe this work experience made a difference in my law school application as I had the opportunity to begin drafting legal documents, learned what I liked/did not like about the field, was able to study for the LSAT during work, and got a great recommendation letter from my boss. A huge plus is that the staff are extremely friendly and flexible.
If you applied this cycle but are deciding to take another year off or have not yet applied, this might be a perfect opportunity for you. PM me if you are interested - serious inquiries only please.
interested!!