It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!
Procrastinator here How many hours are you guys actually committing to studying daily? Seeing the commitment from others will make me feel inferior...and up my game! THANKS!
Comments
It varied for me, but I found my sweet spot to be right around 4 hours a day. Any more than that and I started to get fuzzy and burnt out.
I work full time, so 3hrs/day seems to be a good fit for me.
Definitely don't feel inferior! Quality over quantity. Better to study smart for x amount of hours than get nowhere and feel burnt out with double that.
I also work full time so it depends on what's going on that day. I'd say 1-3 hours each weekday, but 4-5 (with breaks) if I'm not working that day. Weekends are great for catching up on studying and doing a PT.
Six hours of hardcore studying 5x a week, give or take one hour. Some days I'm feeling inspired and pull an eight hour session. Other days I feel burnt out, and do only four. In addition, I usually spend about an hour before sleep each night reviewing my collection of problematic LR questions (ones I got wrong during Blind Review).
I work 50ish hrs/week, so on work heavy days, it’s like 30 Minutes to 2 hours, but on my off days I do a full PT.
Quality over quantity.
I work full time and I'm a full time student but I'm lucky in that I have a desk job with a lot of down time this time of the year so I can get some studying done at work. I usually do 2-3 hours a day, PT on Saturday, and take Sundays off
I try to put in 2 hours a day for 5-6 days a week during the semester. In the summer I'll be studying more or less full time until the July/Sept test. Since the test is so far away and I'm still doing the CC I want to be careful not to burn out
FT studying - 5-6 hours
PT studying - 1-2 hours
(These times are not counting breaks or going on fb or any of that sort. I don't even include time spent planning or meditating. They are purely time spent on LSAT material.)
I work full time, and generally spent 2-3 hours per weekday (take 1 weekday off to avoid burnout) and 4-5 each on Saturday and Sunday.