As far as I am aware you cannot. JY's stance, from what I recall, was, "the best way to prep for the 3 section test is the 4 section PT, which you've been doing."
So, yeah. I paid for monthly subscription to another platform just so that I could do 3 section tests as practice leading up to the Flex.
I'm not sure you can--but personally I like doing four sections because then I get to practice maintaining my concentration for that extra section, and then the actual LSAT flex will feel short and light in comparison. I think 7 sage has an LSAT flex score converter that isnt exact, but it will average out your scores for the two LR sections and give a rough approximation of what your LSAT flex score would be as opposed to the regular score where there are 2 LR sections.
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As far as I am aware you cannot. JY's stance, from what I recall, was, "the best way to prep for the 3 section test is the 4 section PT, which you've been doing."
So, yeah. I paid for monthly subscription to another platform just so that I could do 3 section tests as practice leading up to the Flex.
I'm not sure you can--but personally I like doing four sections because then I get to practice maintaining my concentration for that extra section, and then the actual LSAT flex will feel short and light in comparison. I think 7 sage has an LSAT flex score converter that isnt exact, but it will average out your scores for the two LR sections and give a rough approximation of what your LSAT flex score would be as opposed to the regular score where there are 2 LR sections.
I think powerscore and lsat demon are going to come up 3 sections. HOOOPE 7SAGE can catch up!