I've regressed back into my plateau range of high 150's low 160's. It's disappointing as I thought I had made progress and now I have around 15 of my 21 total preptests in this range. In other words I have been in a consistent plateau my whole testing period with a few beneficial and not so beneficial outliers. Nonetheless, I have thought of a possible solution. Would it work if I took and retook preptests 62-72 until I was able able to score 175+ consistently on all of them. That way I would be able to master some inferences in LR, fine tune my RC, and increase inference making ability and speed in LG. I would keep 73 and 74 fresh to check to see if I made any real progress afterwards. I know it is highly likely I would be remembering a lot of answers, but hopefully I would also be remembering why the respective answers are correct and why the incorrect answers are wrong. I may increase the range (from 62-72 to 57-72) to encompass a few more possibilities for questions but you get the major gist. I really want to break out of this plateau and hit a higher range so that I may have wiggle room on the next test day. My new goal for myself is 165-180. Is this idea stupid or just dumb enough to actual work???
Comments
Truthfully, I am skeptical about the effectiveness of your plan. You will most certainly remember the answers to the questions; therefore, even if you analyze each question and look for ways in which answers are correct and incorrect, you will have prior knowledge of the correct answer, which is counterproductive. Your goal should be to analyze why each answer is right and why each answer is wrong without knowing the correct answer, which points to one and only one solution--blind review.
This is similar to a post someone made about a huge gap between their timed score and BR score, but it turned out that the person was scoring the whole exam, marking the questions they got wrong, and then going back to do BR. So of course their BR was amazing, they only had to choose from 4 ACs and they were probably down to just 2 on a lot of those questions. Even though they thought they were great at BR, it turned out the review was not blind whatsoever.
If I were you I would get more PTs, save the most recent ones for the end of September, and then do a few that you then BR the whole test in depth. Don't worry about circling questions, just take a full timed PT and then do it over again untimed, maybe even with a fresh score sheet. That way you can take your time to really analyze what it is you're having trouble with, and what you don't need to worry about. If you were to take the same 10 PTs and do them over and over, eventually you would get a 175+ but it would give you no indication of your actual skills and development. And then what would you do the last week of September if you get a 157 and 159 on the two most recent PTs? My guess is you would freak out and postpone or freak out and do poorly.
Instead of that, I think you need to take a step back, delve into the analytics of your PTs, and hit some drilling hard for a while with maybe one PT a week for the next month or so. Plateauing in that range means you still are likely making some fundamental errors on non-curvebreaker questions. You need to shore up your weaknesses and go back to basics before trying anything crazy. I know plateauing or getting a disappointing score can be demoralizing, but just take it for what it is: a signal that you do not have the understanding that you think you do. Just let it humble you and use it as motivation to get back to building and solidifying your skills. If you don't already have one, pick up a copy of the LSAT Trainer for an alternative perspective if you need something fresh.
@Pacifico
LR tests how you think-- your ability to reason and evaluate arguments. That's why it's imperative that you take new exams, and not recycle previously taken exams. Every LSAT tests you on the same thing. They are very consistent, which makes PTs an invaluable tool. If the 7sage group's consensus is skeptical, it's really not worth it. Don't fix something that's not broken. Don't be a guinea pig and ruin you chances of getting into your dream school. There are only a finite amount of PTs available, so cherish them.
That said, if you have run out of PTs to take, you really have no choice other than to retake tests.
I think the other posters may be objecting to the focus you seem to have on the score of a repeated test. That score, even if it were a 180, would be meaningless. Nor do I think you need to re-take the entire test over. Focus on your weaknesses, the questions you got wrong and the questions you didn’t have 100% certainty. Don’t worry about the rest.
@7sagelsatstudent180 I'd say you should move forward with your plan up to PT71. Let me know if you'd like to join our Friday BR group (PT68 this week), or you could just sit in for part of it if you'd like. I do agree with this. Retaking without enough time in between or too many times might lead to this kind of score inflation. Yes to this as well. With PT's generally, I'd say ... more is more. You can also "star" questions you want to return to in the 7sage LSAT analytics. @"Alan Cheuk" basically changin' lives with these features, srsly. Teaching can be one of the best ways to learn more deeply. You'll discover what you don't really know well enough to explain to someone else, etc. This is a lot of what happens on the BR groups. I'll realize I don't really full understand what the flaw in an argument is once I try to explain it ... etc.