This is pretty interesting. I felt that this was true before reading this, however. At least the part about increased reasoning skills, we do learn how to sharpen our reasoning skills when studying for the LSAT. I've also noticed my memory has improved. I'm not sure if it's LSAT, or me spending less time watching tv/being at the computer.
"...they completed an intensive, three-month, 100-hour LSAT preparation course." 100 hours in 3 months?! From the discussion posts, I think a lot of us put in a significantly greater time commitment than that. How does that match others' experiences? Maybe they should scan 7Sagers' brains to see the maximum effect
@VegMeg55 it' one of my all time favorites... and definitely a must watch for ALL law school bound students... not a lot has changed about law classes, preparation and exams from the time this movie was made
I'm the same as @ddakjiking. Through LSAT prep I've become more sensitive to logical fallacies in every day arguments. And I think about things more logically.
@"Nilesh S" I watched it the week before I started LSAT prep. Now every time I hit a particularly ass-kicky section, I resist the temptation to fold it up into a paper plane and watch it fly into the sea. One of these days...
@VegMeg55 good call.. its always best to do that with first year grades if they are mailed to you in an envelop... unfortunately, this is no longer possible as they are disclosed online... I'd throw the computer away (can't fold it into a plane), but if it were mine, it would be too expensive... if it were somebody else's, it would classify as willful destruction of property
@emli1000 it is... and makes you wonder about all those theories of natural ceilings that go floating about the LSAT prep world... i.e. that there are people who cannot score more an a particular score... all that starts to sound more and more fuzzy.
"i.e. that there are people who cannot score more an a particular score..."
God, EVERY TIME I read a post that mentions this phenomenon I want to facepalm so hard. The phrase "I can't go higher than 1XX" is this single greatest disservice an individual can do to him/herself while studying for the LSAT.
@waterspolo you might actually want to start a discussion with that heading so that you get better visibility on the forum... this is buried 20 posts down, so some people may see it, some may not... the bold heading of your new discussion will get it out there for everyone to see.
@waterspolo OMGGG WHERE HAVE YOU BEEN ALL MY LIFE? I've been looking for someone in the Bay Area for a while but now I'm moving back home to SoCal. I'm also on studypal!
Comments
http://newscenter.berkeley.edu/2012/08/22/intense-prep-for-law-school-admissions-test-alters-brain-structure/
God, EVERY TIME I read a post that mentions this phenomenon I want to facepalm so hard. The phrase "I can't go higher than 1XX" is this single greatest disservice an individual can do to him/herself while studying for the LSAT.