I am getting in a bit of a groove in terms of studying for this thing. I am finally picking off answers and my mind is growing to understand sentence structure as well as logic structure. With that said, I have had a pretty crazy study schedule, and am only going to afford around 12 PT's until the big kahuna in February.
February is going to be my first LSAT take, and if my current grasp of things continues, I think I may actually have something going (crossing fingers, because I am not testing but just doing random exercises and studying the curriculum intensely). OBviously, if I mess up, I am going to retake in June and September if necessary.
With that said, I will obviously know where I could be come the first few I take and BR. However, I want to make sure I have a grasp of exams that you guys feel were most challenging or best suited to prepare me for the current exam.
Which 12 would you pick?
Comments
12 is perhaps more than enough. With just under eight weeks left, I wouldn't do any more than that. I would also preserve some of the newest tests, should you decide to retake - you'll really want those leading up to any other impending test date.
Maybe take 65 and 66 now, leading up to the newer tests as you near the Feb. LSAT. It depends somewhat on your goal score/range and where you are currently scoring, but I'd try to save at least 7-8 of the 70s if the chance of a June and/or beyond take is a relatively decent one.
Specifically, I'd recommend running with something like this: 65, 66, 68, 70, 72, 73, 77, 79, in that order.
In this way, you'll gradually lead up to the most recent and thus likely most reliable material. Some of the PTs just mentioned have some standout material, others not so much. More importantly, you're preserving six of the 70s (including I guess PT 80) along with a few late 60s.
Don't take a fresh, never-before-seen PT a week or less before test day. There's honestly no reason for doing so. Your most recent take could maybe be a retake, where you won't likely get a score that will psych you out and will keep from getting stale in a full, five-section test. I highly advise you to take PT 79 (assuming you're operating with my proposed schedule) no less than a week-and-a-half to two weeks out. You then have about six weeks for fresh PTs. I think 8 is plenty in that time frame.
So I would choose the 6 most recent. This way you don't burn through all the most recent material in case a retake a needed.
However, if you are dead set on taking 12, then I would probably take the 6 most recent and maybe 6 from the 60s.
I'd also recommend taking 6 PTs (1 each week) and then BRing the PTs to the core and drilling your weaknesses like nobody's business until your next PT.
When I started studying I'd take a bunch of PT's back to back, but realized that I'm not BRing right and that I'm not actually retaining anything. Slowing down to just one PT a week and really focusing on why I'm getting certain questions wrong and figuring out that gap has really helped me increase my score.
Best of luck to you!!
What I am gathering from all of you is that it is much better to take an exam or two a week ( at most) and focus the remainder of your time on pure BR and drilling to drill down on things you messed up on during the examination.
That's pretty intensive. So, if I were to take a one PT week, does the following schedule make sense?
M: PT/ BR
T: Finish BR if remaining, begin curriculum on weak points
W: Curriculum with drilling
Th: same
Friday: off
Saturday: Curriculum with drilling
Sunday: Curriculum with drilling
If I have a two PT per test schedule:
M:PT/ BR
T: Finish Br, curriculum and drill
W: Curriculum and drill
Th: PT/BR
F: Finish BR/ curriculum and drill
Sat: Off
Sunday Curriculum with drilling.
My work schedule is M-F from 7 am to 2 on Tu, We,Fr and 7am to 5pm Mo and Thu.
I normally begin studies immediately after 5/ 5:30 until around 1030/ 11 so if I were to do a PT, I would need to start BR immediately after the exam. I know it's not preferred but this is as efficient as I have been.
That is my worry. I hate wasting the 70's but I am hoping that, if it comes to a retake, a couple of weeks off will place some of those exams out of memory so I can take them semi-fresh later on. Especially since my focus will be solely on PT'ing and BR if I have to retake. Thank you!
That is perhaps my biggest fear. I often get stuck in a trap of feeling like I need to work more rather than just working for understanding. I am sure many people here have the same problem. After all, we are so used to just drilling things in our brains in college or other education. Still, retention is far more important.
(If you can swing it, take a few tests at the actual test center. I did that this last Saturday, went to the law school hosting my February test and took a timed PT in one of the empty classrooms. The psychological effect was enormous. As I walked out of the building, I visualized doing so in February, and asked myself: what between now and then is as important as complete peace of mind in that moment? Nothing.)
That's just not how it works, my friend. Retakes are very helpful, but you can't ever use it the same way you would a fresh take. I'd HIGHLY suggest dedicating yourself to reaching a score and THEN sitting for the exam. You're doing it backwards IMO.
Doing 12 tests in 6 weeks is highly going to result in diminishing returns. You'll increase your score a bit, but the time is better spent doing 1 PR a week with BR and targeting your weaknesses afterwards while drilling. Also, make sure your LG is consistently as close to -0 as you can get it.
I'd recommend taking PT 36 with a thorough BR. That will give you some idea of where you stand without burning a particularly valuable PT. With that information, you will be much better positioned to make this decision. If you're 20 points off your target score, you need to rethink either your timeline or your target score. If you're 2 points off, then that's obviously a much more manageable situation. But you can't make an informed decision here without some kind of a baseline.
I am about 3 points away from where I need to be to get a full ride into a third tier school.
I have a feeling I can pull the 3 points. My decision will come after I do it or not. Do I want to hold off and fight for the best school, or do I want to take the scholarship offer.
We will see.
I have taken around 5 exams total prior to today's. Started out with a 150 and am now hovering around 157.