Hey Everyone! I'm new to the 7sage community and I'm so happy that I signed up! I took a 2 and half month classroom course this past summer which ended 2 weeks ago. Unfortunately, it wasn't as helpful as I had hoped and I didn't increase my score at all (considering I didn't take that many prep tests). However, since beginning the 7sage curriculum, it seems as if I have learned far more then in 2 weeks then I did in that entire course. Wish I would've started this earlier!
Anyways, my diagnostic test was a 141, which I was extremely disappointed about. I took a second PT after a month and a half and scored a 133 because my instructor told me to just focus on the first half of every section. I haven't taken another PT since. I plan on taking the June 2017 LSAT. I've read on various forums that it's impossible to break the 170s with such a low diagnostic (personally, now that I have 7sage, I don't think it is). However, with dedicated and deliberate prep, realistically speaking, is it possible for me to score in the high 160's (165-169) or even break 170's with about a year prep? (Sept. 2017 LSAT).
And, anyone who has done this, how long did you study? How many hours a week, on average? What other resources beside 7sage? How did you schedule your prep/time management? Did you have a study buddy? Any other commitments besides prep? (I'm a full time senior in undergrad). How did you avoid burnout? Did you plateau or hit a ceiling, and how did you break through?
Sorry for the long question, just trying to set realistic expectations so that I can set some effective study goals. Thanks for your help!!
Comments
I really took my time studying. I'm not sure my per week average, but I don't think it was 40, or maybe even 30 hours a week. I probably spent 20-25 a week in the beginning and near test dates, with a significant drop (maybe 1-2 hours a day) during the rest of my period. I've had a full-time job for most of my time studying - a job I enjoy - and I married right around my beginning months of studying. I wanted to enjoy this unique time before going to law school, despite being very, very hungry about finally going.
I initially used PowerScore, which I wouldn't recommend, and used the LSAT Trainer as well, which I found somewhat redundant given what I had already learned from 7Sage and PS. For the most part, I've stuck exclusively with 7Sage and with the Manhattan Prep forums.
I've hit very long plateaus, I've been burnout once or twice, and I've had plenty of doubts about my capabilities on the test. Expect a lot of random dips, and perhaps some sudden surges. Expect to engage in psychological warfare against the test - a war that is best fought with a constant awareness of the inevitable struggles and unpredictable hiccups of the test and with social interaction with others taking the test. Once you've finished the 7Sage curriculum, BR group calls are excellent for the later.
A 20+ score increase is no small feat, but one's cap isn't so much determined by some number increase, but by the material learned. Your lower score simply means you have more to learn. It does not in any way indicate your ceiling.
With your mindset, you're in a really good spot. Your mentality is the first step to actually achieving the scores you mentioned.
Where did you read that breaking into the 170s is virtually impossible with a low diagnostic?? Again, your score doesn't predestine your ability to learn the inherent logic and language of the test. My gosh, some people...
No.
Possible?
Absolutely.
The reason it's not realistic is that for the majority of test takers it's very difficult to stay focused enough to get that high of an increase, especially as a senior in college, due to pressure to finish strong, making the best of your last year, and whatever personal things you have going on. However, if your study ethic is as enthusiastic as your post sounds, it's very possible to reach your desired score range, even from that diagnostic.
Personally, I've used many test prep materials ranging from PowerScore to Blueprint, and prepping with them resulted in an official score of 160 last year. Since that time, using 7sage for a few months taught me much more about the fundamentals of the test and now I PT around a 170, with a high of 176. In my opinion, I don't think there is any other resource necessary apart from 7sage and I'm very grateful to both the staff and the community.
With a year and plenty of hard work there is no reason you can't. Truly believe that and I guarantee you will hit your goal.
Whether I meet my current goals or not on the June test, I still plan to take in December, as I know I still have room to grow. Again, this ridiculous mindset that one's ceiling is somehow predetermined by one's diagnostic score is so flabbergastingly unsupported. Of course, this may be true in all practicality, since supposed experts seem to love feeding this bull to unsuspecting test takers. But your low score is at least primarily due to your lack of understanding of what's presented in the test. Of course you're going to perform relatively low if you have no exposure to the logic inherent in the LSAT, and there may be some people who will not do well on the test no matter how hard they try. But it's learnable - somewhat akin to learning a new language. Your intelligence and test-taking abilities play into the ease with which you are able to obtain certain scores, but even standoutish qualities of either is not necessary to do very, very well on the LSAT. I myself like to think I have proven that, and I'm know there are others on 7Sage alone who feel the same way.
I feel as if I'm a witness spreading the gospel of 7Sage. The PowerScore "Bibles" are practically heretical, and almost every other source for LSAT prep misleads individuals with dangerous, underlying assumptions about the test. I feel like every day, I'm fighting to keep people away from false teachers, and I can hardly take their foolishness anymore!!
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Good luck!
The LSAT does test literacy, but if that was the main focus of the test at all then anyone with the reading skills and lexicon of a 7th grader could get a 170+
Also stats show that English majors, on average, don't score very well on this test. Yet, Math/Physics majors, on average, score the highest.
I expected your reaction, and I think it comes from a simplistic idea of reading comp, no offense. To understand a word is one thing. It's different to understand a sentence, still more different to understand a passage. When I say "reading comp," I'm talking about something most college-educated people actually suck at doing, not to mention 7th graders. I've noticed English majors deal mostly with literary art (fiction, poetry) and not very dense material, so your report of their performance doesn't surprise me.
But you're right, it's not all about English. Perhaps I made my point too strong. Still, I'm confident that being a good reader counts for a lot more than people think. I have noticed remarkable improvement in a friend of mine whose sole LSAT prep until now has been reading.
Maybe 160 is the wrong place for a reading comp threshold. A score of 140-150 still has "reading comp" written all over it, something the test taker needs to address in order to bridge the gap to 170.
Like I said, I'm no one. It's easy for idiotic randos to dole out advice on the Internet. Don't worry too much about my silly opinions. I just think some of these people struggling with the test could gain a lot from reading. 'Depends on what you read, of course. Gladwell, for example, is a popular author whose writing is not difficult enough to repay the time.
Good luck to all. 'Great folks here.
Perhaps this is why I often hear the "read the economist" or "scientific American magazine" recommendations on various LSAT forums. I'll have to look reading a lot more sense material from now on, perhaps that'll help.
On a side note, 2 weeks into the 7sage curriculum, I have already seen MASSIVE improvements. My timing is spot on and I've gotten more then 80 percent of all questions I've worked on correct. It's like literally, something just clicked overnight. 7sage is magic. I'm so pissed I didn't start it earlier and I'm especially pissed I paid almost 2000 bucks for a course that didn't even help. I'm now confident that with some time, lots of hard work along with 7sage, I'll definitely hit 170 for sure. Good luck to everyone! You can do it!
Good luck!
And that makes me really happy to hear!
Best of luck to you as well!