I wish you the best! What I find helps me to stay engaged with the material is to reteach it to myself before moving on, somewhat imitating a classroom environment. Lol, sounds crazy but it gets the job done. If you aren't psycho like me, try getting a tutor if possible. Maybe find people who are also studying for the LSAT to keep you engaged. The reason for my suggestions is because I'm not convinced these companies that do LSAT prep in classroom environments (Kaplan/Princeton Review etc.) have what it takes to allow someone to score very high unless they had a really high diagnostic to begin with. Anyway, whatever you decide just remember that you can always increase your score more than 5 points by using the right materials and giving yourself the time to reach that goal.
Can't help on the refund front but if you are the type who learns better in the classroom, I definitely recommend joining the blind review groups! It's a more interactive way to supplement the 7sage curriculum. But all the best to you in your prep -- good luck!
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