Hey guys!
I'm aiming for the June 2015 LSAT. I've gone through pretty much the entire curriculum (a few unfinished practice sets floating out there). My PT scores have increased significantly since December '14. 7sage has been a phenomenal teaching tool.
Right now, I'm sort of hitting a mental wall. My blind review for the past month has been pretty consistent, and I can't seem to score higher during blind review. My problem areas are the more difficult LR and RC questions. Does anyone have tips on how to get past that wall? Review specific lessons? Or is it just continuing taking prep tests? I still have 3 months, so a fairly good chunk of time. But I really want to master the material.
Thank you!
Julia
Comments
If you're missing only the most difficult question types of a particular question type, it could be helpful to get the Cambridge most difficult packets (like jdawg suggested) to get exposure to the most difficult LR and RC questions.
If you're missing only the most difficult question types regardless of question type, I think that's an exposure problem, which can be overcome by drilling Cambridge packets and taking additional PTs.
When I said entire curriculum, I meant the core curriculum. I haven't finished all the practice tests (currently on PT 44, so I have a long way to go).
Thanks jdawg113, that's a good tip for being more thorough during BR. blah170blah, my BR is currently hitting the high 160s. Do you have any additional thoughts, seeing as I'm on PT 44 right now?
1) Evaluate and see if you're missing certain question types and review those
2) For those questions you are getting wrong (and the ones you get right as well to reinforce good habits), write down:
- the argument core (what is the premise and conclusion)
- provide explanations for why 4 of the answer choices are incorrect
- provide an explanation for why the correct answer choice is in fact correct
Being honest with yourself for step 2 is crucial. When I first did this, I noticed that when I eliminated answer choices, I was saying, "Well, because..it just is wrong." It wasn't until I could say, "this answer choice is wrong because it's outside the scope" or "there's a temporal fallacy taking place" or a "this answer choice shifts the subject" that I saw massive improvements in my LR.