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sarah1328453
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sarah1328453
Thursday, Jul 12 2018

@ said:

Are you about to start your freshman year? Or are you transitioning from part time to full time undergrad study? If the former is the case, it is probably too early to begin studying for the LSAT. If I were you, I would focus on settling into college life and figuring out a study routine that allows you to maintain a high GPA. You can retake the LSAT or postpone it until you're ready, but you can't go back in time and erase less than ideal grades from your undergrad transcript. If you want to go to law school right after undergrad, the recommended time to take the LSAT is typically June of your junior year (this allows you to retake in September if necessary and still apply to law schools on time during the fall of your senior year of undergrad). If you start studying so far in advance, you risk burnout.

I defintely worded my original post poorly, I am actually a rising junior. I am most worried about not having time to dedicate to studying because although I very much enjoy figuring out logic games and LR questions, I would say that my weakness is in RC and I am already getting frustrated when doing practice sections.

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Wednesday, Jul 11 2018

sarah1328453

Asking for opinions

Hi-

I'm planning on taking the June 2019 LSAT and am trying to decide which materials to buy. I've taken 1 diagnostic test and scored a 152 on it, and am looking to score in the high 160s for the actual test. Starting in September I will be a full time undergrad student and so am considering in between the Premium package and the Ultimate package. My dad thinks that I should just get Premium that way if I dislike the course I can find a different one but if I like it then I can just extend it. I agree but also just don't know if I have the time during the semester to go through the full course. Any suggestions?

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