Hi there,
Is anyone down to study (seriously hammer out LSAT questions) in the Los Angeles area? I'm in the Cerritos area. I plan on taking the July exam.
On weekends, I have one-hour lunch breaks at work, I use the full hour to eat within 20/25 minutes and then do a timed section or blind review while eat for the full hour. After work, instead of going home (because I know I'll start eating or cooking and watching Netflix, I head to the library for an hour - then get home and handle evening business. After dinner, I usually study from 8/9 to 10/11. On weekends, I either do a full PT or focus on my practice on question types/sections I'm weak in and combine blind review.
Hi, may I please join you guys?
I like to reward myself with fun events. Maybe that might help. Also having a studying buddy helps.
Hey, My name is Tuaku and I'm interested in joining a study group. I'm in Cali, but I can be flexible.
Hi there,
Is anyone down to study (seriously hammer out LSAT questions) in the Los Angeles area? I'm in the Cerritos area. I plan on taking the July exam.
Yes, I am still interested. Can we meet up at USC on the w/ends?
Honestly, go with the school that gives you more money. I cannot stress that enough! I currently work for a prestigious law firm and I know so many successful attorneys who went to T10 schools (who also had great experiences clerking). Do you really want to limit your options after law school due to debt? Graduating debt free will give you the freedom to decide which area of law you would like to practice (BigLaw or Public Interest). Maybe even gain several cool clerkship. Plus, a lot top law firms hire the cream of crop, so if you decide to go to Yale, you will have to work extremely hard to be in the top 10% of your class. All the best on you law school journey! The 7sage community is proud of you!
I deleted social media apps, I carry something that pertains to the LSAT with me every day (a practice test or a problem set) when I feel lazy but I know I should be doing SOMETHING, I will practice a logic game. I find that even when I start working on a few problems, I lose track of time by getting deeper into practice. Once you do it enough, it starts to become habitual.