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wendelsr219
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wendelsr219
Thursday, Mar 27 2014

Check out the website scribd. I have had some luck with older tests on there.

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wendelsr219
Thursday, Jan 23 2014

No problem!

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Wednesday, Jan 22 2014

wendelsr219

Easy Way to Print PDFs

So if you are like me, I find it a pain in the butt to open each individual PDF for each section and have to go through the printing process for each one. Not that its terrible, but there is an easier way. I download all the PDFs for each section all at once. You can then to go this site : http://merge.smallpdf.com/ and drag all the PDFs to that section and they will merge them all into one document! I find it especially helpful on the logic games. Its also an easier way to store them in a folder so you can easily go back and print them without going through the lessons and redownloading.

Hope this helps someone!

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wendelsr219
Thursday, May 22 2014

For me the subject matter carries more weight in difficulty. If I see one that has to do with science related article I usually do those last because its usually harder for me to follow. I do the english, humanities, arts, and econ ones first. I find this works best for me. You can also use the LSAT analytic tool on this site to figure out what your problem areas are by subject.

I think you're right to not go in the strict order given, but if you do as you say and start in the back (with your worst passage) then you may end up starting on the easiest passage with only 5 minutes left (losing possible points on your best passage,) or even not getting to the first passage because you need to spend so much more time on reading and understanding the harder passages. I think you may see a better pay off by improving your reading speed for the first three passages and gaining some time to answer the last passage.

The points are all the same regardless of difficulty of passage or its placement. What you're doing seems counter intuitive to me.

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wendelsr219
Tuesday, May 20 2014

I can't find on the website explicitly where LST gets these numbers for LSAT & GPA, but in just reading briefly over their employment numbers and other research for that information, if they were done similarly, I would lean for LST. LSN states that their numbers are user supplied. I didn't look into it more than that, but I am sure somewhere deeper in their information sections they should notate where and with what methods they came to those numbers.

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wendelsr219
Tuesday, May 20 2014

I just found this gem on Cambridge's site last night (sorry 7sage.) They've compiled and grouped LR sections by TYPE from the first 38 PT. I have been using it to target specific areas I need work on, including NA. They aren't free, but I think $3-$12 isn't outrageous. I think they bulk them for like $80 if you want all of them. Hope they help!

http://www.cambridgelsat.com/problem-sets/logical-reasoning/

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wendelsr219
Wednesday, Mar 19 2014

That was awesome! Thanks for sharing!

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Tuesday, Mar 18 2014

wendelsr219

New video player or setting issue?

I can't tell if there is a setting I altered or if its the new video player, but when I go from full screen to regular my video restarts every time. Its a real pain when you're taking notes on the computer or trying to refer to the comments section and not being able to go back and forth. Is there a way I can change this to keep streaming when I go back and forth from screen sizes?

Thank you!

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wendelsr219
Monday, Jan 13 2014

@ so really, we should call you mrlsat179?

I saw earlier where someone mentioned whether they should skip around sections on the syllabus or stick it straight through and was looking for opinions on this. I have gotten about 30% in and feel myself getting frustrated. Not with actual content or understanding, but I think with just knowing that I know once this LR section is done there will be another and another. To combat this I have just begun to work on the reading comp section to shake things up a bit. I can't see any issues with doing so, but was wondering if anyone else has tried section hopping versus working straight through the syllabus.

I don't plan on just picking any old random lessons; it's more like, "Last week I worked on all LR, maybe this week I'll work on RC instead."

Thoughts and experiences? Thank you!

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wendelsr219
Tuesday, Jun 10 2014

http://37.media.tumblr.com/e65c743db1a63c26cae42e04bed9f212/tumblr_mfcba5gtlp1rya6a0o1_500.jpg

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wendelsr219
Tuesday, Jun 10 2014

I am going to wait it out. I know I didn't pull it off on that last game but I felt confident in my LR and RC, until I went on all the message boards. I had two LG as well and hit the 4th game with 12 minutes left. I think I was able to get 1-2 on them right and chose a letter down the line on the rest.

I just feel like the September one could end up being worse. Regardless, I would evaluate your performance on how well you know yourself. That last game aside, compare how you felt to your old PTs and the results from those. You know your testing better than anyone else.

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wendelsr219
Saturday, Jun 07 2014

I will snowball off of the skipping topic - when I forgot to skip and get too preoccupied with just solving, I do significantly worse (-5 extra avg per LR section.) Its something you have to really train yourself to do, but I think is super beneficial.

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wendelsr219
Friday, Jun 06 2014

I personally didn't find the LG packages worth it. If you just redo all the ones 7S has and bundle those, I felt they were pretty representative. After you start doing PT you can also begin to incorporate those as well. I would just scan them before I took the PT so that I could reprint later when I wanted to redo them for practice.

I would say, do the 7S curriculum, master all those games and once you start taking PT, add those to the mix.

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wendelsr219
Sunday, Apr 06 2014

I always went in order within each lesson. However, if I found myself getting bored or needing a different pace, I would finish my current lesson and move on to a lesson on logic games or reading comp. Basically just work on a new subject for a few days.

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wendelsr219
Friday, Jul 04 2014

I would also use the LSAT analyzer on this site and enter your last 10 PT or so and focus on those areas you are weakest in, using the Cambridge LSAT packs divided by question type. That way you can really work on the specific areas you need help in before moving on to retaking PTs.

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wendelsr219
Tuesday, Jun 03 2014

http://www.cambridgelsat.com/problem-sets/reading-comprehension/

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wendelsr219
Tuesday, Jul 01 2014

http://www.top-law-schools.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=230745 This forum will blow up when the scores start being sent out. If you don't feel like constantly refreshing the LSAC site, you can check that every once and a while and see if people have started to get their scores.

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