With the December LSAT approaching, I have yet to reach the 170 mark. I sit between a 161-165. I know that's not ideal, but I'm still working to improve.
My LG is between 0 and -3.
My reading comp and LR suffer the most.
I'm just wondering if people have tips on how to best study for these from here on out.
For Reading Comp, I'm going to go through a full 35 minute 4 passage a day to improve upon technique/skill.
For LR.... I'm unsure. I consistently get from 4-7 wrong on each LR section. When I go through BR, I can get that number down, but I'm still consistently at least 3 wrong.
Should I focus on reviewing the question types (to which there is no specific pattern of *most types wrong*), or should I focus more on doing old, timed, sections? So I can work on under pressure circumstances. I think that's where I lack most. My mistakes are not reading correctly, rushing, ect.
I think I haven't grasped the whole "you should try and answer them right instead of answering them all" concept. Does anyone have a strategy for this? I find I'm weakest at NA, PF, and PR... should I just circle the Q when I see them, not attempt, and come back if I have time, or try to attempt?
Thanks!!
Comments
I struggled with LR for a while and got that to be my best section... which is awesome because there are two of them! If you're already good on LG, then LR is where you likely stand the best chance of increasing your score.
I would look into drilling questions by type for a few days and then going back to full timed sections of LR. Drilling gets you to a point where you know how a certain question feels and what they're looking for. As an example, I couldn't get a Main Point question wrong if I tried. Moreover, I don't even need to read the whole stimulus usually...I read until I find the conclusion/MP and then stop, scan the answers for the same or similar wording, bubble and roll on. Takes maybe 10 seconds.
That took a little time to get to that level, but it makes a huge difference since there are usually 2-5 of these on any given test. If you can get NA and SA the same way, then you'll have more time for those longer PMR and PF questions.
Cambridge sells the questions by type in a pretty cheap package. You can start on the types you hate (they're ordered easy to hard in each type) and as you progress they'll become more challenging. For some, JY will have videos, for others (since these are pre PT-35) you might have to work it out on your own or read a student's explanation.
By doing NA questions maybe 10 in a row followed by SA questions 10 in a row, you'll see how they're different which will make them WAY easier. Promise!
PF and PMR are just long. They're not bad, just time consuming. You'll get there!
Good luck.
Joe, thanks for your feedback. Very helpful! I've actually gone back to drilling from the Cambridge packets for individual question types andI was wondering if you (or anyone else drilling from the Cambridge packets ) could shed some light on how you approach drilling. By that, I mean, do you generally work through all of the questions straight, or maybe split them up into chunks? Do you set a time limit for answering a set of questions? Do you blind review?
Thanks in advance!
Thanks for your help! Good luck to you both
However my schedule only permits me to take them on those days. I work a full time job, so unless I wake up at 330 and take one before work... I have to take them after work. And I don't think either is conducive to the test conditions/my mindset when I'm doing the exam.... in the AM I'll be tired. in the PM i'll likely be just as tired.
Do you suggest doing this over putting them on the weekend?
You don't need to buy any extra material. Before I got the Cambridge packets (for convenience and laziness really), I just used old exams I'd already taken, printed them, cut them up and organized by type. I did NOT time myself at all. I worked them in groups of 10 and always switched to another type after 10 of one or another. I didn't BR them since I gave myself enough time to find the right answer, but I did review them if I got them wrong. When I did, I'd watch JY's video to see why I got it wrong then put it back in the pile to do again later.
In terms of PTs, I too work full time and before my first test back in September, I was doing 4-5 tests per weekend. You're not overdoing it. Once you get good, you only really need to BR questions you weren't 100% on and that number declines as your ability improves. I'm now doing 2-3 a week for my retake in December.
The speed absolutely comes in time. Drilling w/o time will make LR so much easier under timed conditions. You'll still get stumped from time to time, but you'll know you're stumped and be able to skip those and move on.
Do the packets take all of their questions from a limited number of tests? Your advice on getting the packets sounds pretty solid and I think I'll get some, but I just want to make sure I don't affect my future practice tests by drilling questions before I see them on a preptest.
Thanks is advance!
I have printed out the MC/MSS/MBT/MBF question types and prep test June 2007 and Prep test 36.
I highlighted those question types for both of the exams and will be doing those ones this evening.
Tomorrow evening I will be doing PSA/SA/NA/Flaw.
Wednesday I will write a practice test in the evening. (I decided to spread them out).
Friday I will take the day to review. Work on more practice of the weaker question types.
Saturday re write. Potentially Sunday re write.
Thanks for the tips