Hello everyone!
Lately I have been struggling to fully devout myself to studying. I just can’t seem to find the time. Currently, I just completed my undergrad studies, and I got a fulltime job working at a law firm. When I get home from work all I want to do is crash. So, my question is what is the best way to balance work and studying? Not to mention my personal life or should I just accept the fact that for the next couple of months I won’t have a personal life? I just want to make sure that I am fully dedicating myself to the LSAT and law school, and not just half-stepping things. Any advice would be greatly appreciated. Also, as a side note I am looking to take the June LSAT, so I know things are getting down to the wire, and I am starting to question if I even have enough time .
Thanks again,
Kristen
Comments
That being said, what's even more important is to allocate a manageable number of hours of studying you should do per day and stick to it. If that means you can squeeze in 3-4 hours a day, do it. If that means going through one LR section (~25 questions), one LG section (4 games), and one RC section (4 passages), do that. The point is that you need to figure out the sweet spot for you. Don't get down on yourself if you aren't sleeping 3 hours a day because you're working, studying, partying, and going to school full time. However, in order to write the June test, I would say you should try to allocate at least an hour a day during the week, and work longer hours on the weekend, with the goal of trying to average ~10-20 hours a week.
I can really relate. I also have a full-time job at a law firm, graduated undergrad a couple years ago
It is really hard to carve out time. But it's doable! Once you figure out your priorities, you just have to follow through with discipline. For me, I knew that I get really drained throughout the workday, and I don't have the energy to study for something as rigorous as the LSAT after work. So I've actually forced myself to wake up a few hours before work and use that time to only study for the LSAT (I started doing that at the beginning of 2015). That way when I come home after work, I can just unwind and chill, and go to bed early. Saturdays are also great for focused LSAT study time (I use my Saturdays for practice tests and blind review).
To be honest, yes my personal life has suffered for this season. But I've still managed to find time here and there to hang out. You just have to remember that it's not forever, it's just for a few months. And your friends should understand!
Hope that helps. Clarify and stick to your priorities until June
Julia
It is possible. I don't know what your diagnostic is. Maybe it's in the 160s and all you have to do is bump it to the 170s. Which seems possible in the allotted time frame.
IF you're at the prep test stage and your mark is a lot lower, sign up for June and see how the tests go closer to. If you're consistently on the higher end of your target score, then you should probably write it. If you're not even touching your target score, then maybe you should schedule for October. Waiting isn't THAT bad, and if you work full time I KNOW how hard it is to work 8 hours and come home and have to study for 6-7. It's horrible.
I'm not a morning person. I leave for work at 7AM to get to work by 8:30 AM. I have a long commute through heavy traffic. I tried getting up early one morning to do a drill but it didn't work for me. I work in a call center. And most mornings its slow enough that I can take care of a few lessons in between calls. As long as I don't neglect my calls, my boss doesn't care. Right now, I'm trying to study an hour a day and study hard on the weekends. But its hard to resist the urge to crash when I get home. I think the answer is you have to dedicate yourself to this. And its really not that long. I don't have a social life either but I didn't really have one before I started prepping for the LSAT. Working full time and studying for the LSAT simultaneously sucks but it's going to be so worth it.
Anyway, I'm rambling. I wish everyone the best of luck. :-)
Thanks Again, you guys are helping to relieve a lot of my LSAT anxieties.
- Register for the 7Sage course, if you haven't already. My score jumped massively after working my way through the curriculum. A 10-15 point jump is certainly possible.
- As others have said, work out a study schedule that's realistic for you. It may be that you can't carve out enough time to study for the June LSAT, which isn't a failing on your part -- it's just the way it is.
- If you're not scoring near your goal score by the date change deadline, postpone to October. Remember: a high LSAT score could be the difference between a low- or mid-tier school without scholarships and a top-tier school with. In the long run, you'll be much, MUCH better off waiting for that great score than rushing into a crappy one.
- I got a lot done over my lunch break. I actually looked forward to studying at that time, because it was a nice change of pace from my regular work.
- Remember that maintaining some semblance of a personal life will help you manage test-induced stress. You can't work effectively if you're not happy and healthy.
- Our brains need plenty of sleep in order to assimilate all of the new knowledge we're forcing into them, so don't sacrifice a full night's sleep in order to study.
@shine.on.me I feel our situations are very relatable. On my diagnostic test I took a week ago, I scored a sad 144. At first I was feeling very discouraged, but I noticed that my main issue was not being able to finish in time. This seems to be an issue with you as well, but I am hoping with practice that my timing will improve. But your story is very motivational, and I know now that there is still hope for me. Congratulations on your improvements!!
@AllsionM, thanks for the great encouraging advice. I also like the idea of studying during my lunch break. My goal is to commit 2.5 hours a day to the LSAT during the week. I get an hour-30 min. lunch break so if I use my hour to study (and eat of course) I will only have one more hour to go, which I will cover before I go to work. This schedule sounds “idea” but we will see how things work out in reality. Also, I understand now that it is important not to rush into LSAT. I will gage my progress to decide when I think it’s best to take the LSAT as you and @harrismegan stress.
Thanks again for such great advice.
One thing I want to stress - your ability to finish a section on time is directly linked to your competence with said material. Thus, your problem is not speed. It never is. Your problem is understanding, and recognizing this is key because it shifts the entire paradigm. Don't practice with the intent of 'going faster' (how do you practice that, anyway?) - that's counterproductive and will likely lead to some pretty nasty bad habits and questionable 'shortcuts'. Practice with the intent of learning the right way to do things, and the speed will come. Always remember that 13/13 is better than 12/25.
Thanks!!
If you don't need to support your family or can live off of what you have saved until June, quit your job and study.
LSAT is 80% of the admission decision. Therefore, lsat should be your new best friend/boyfriend/girlfriend. You live, breath, sleep lsat. The reward at the end will be worth a lot more.
There is no social life or personal obligations in the 180s lsat taker world.
I tried to always get a couple hours in each night. If you find yourself too tired, then try to do it in the morning as everyone said.
Weekends are your time. You can't spend the WHOLE weekend training but I usually got started around 10am and finished around 4-5. That's a solid day of work. Between the logic games at lunch, an hour (or two) each night, and 15hrs over the weekend, you're looking at 30hr weeks. That's plenty. You can cut down your Sunday studying a bit and still have put in a lot of time.
I definitely tried to maintain a social life. I didn't have THAT much time to dole out but I'm a big pub trivia fan and that kept me sane. Make sure you get some exercise in too (I usually tried to spend at least 5hrs a week on this still). You need to keep some semblance of a normal life or you'll crash.
After a month or two you'll get used to it and you'll start to recognize what you're learning and when you are learning best.