I'll be done with the 7sage course around June/starting to take the PTs and Blueprint is scheduled to start in July. Planning to take the October LSAT, and wondered if this approach would help as a form of review.
While I do love power-studying on my own, there's always something about a classroom setting where you're able to converse with the instructor/classmates that help you glean precious nuggets and tighten skillsets.
Wondering if anyone's taken this approach and/or if this is even a good idea?
Comments
How are your PT scores @SUNKIST11 ? If you're right around 160 or higher, you probably don't need an expensive prep course. Depending on your specific location, how many classmates you have will determine how much you will be able to converse. My BP class only had <10 people so I was able to converse a lot as if I was paying for extra tutoring. I imagine you wouldn't get that much individual time if you're in a class of 30 or 40+. After having done 7Sage after BP, I can safely say both are equally good and sufficient enough to get you past 160. If you're someone who cannot self-study and needs a structured study plan, then BP (or any other live prep course) will offer that. If you're someone who has the dedication to commit to self-studying, 7Sage is excellent and not to mention much cheaper.
@SUNKIST11 Why not join us for a few BR groups (Sat 7pm EST or Monday 8pm EST or both) and see if it fills the need you'd like to address through a course? In addition, some of us meet for topical/conceptual work during weekday evenings. That kind of arrangement serves a slightly different purpose but, again, might fail the bill.
And we don't charge anything for any of this--the time spent and quality of discussion are greater than or at least equivalent to any course or (many instances of) paid instruction.
I mean, when was the last time we missed a single question on group BR? I can't remember it.
I think 7sage + The Trainer + Manhattan LR/RC are sufficient for anyone who wants to ace the LSAT. Think about it this way. Completing 7sage/reading books is comparable to learning how to drive a car, meaning that it provides you with the necessary tools to succeed. After you learn the fundamentals and what you are supposed to be looking for (learn how to drive), relearning what you already know at an extremely high cost is pointless. Do you really need someone to reaffirm that you know which pedal is the brake and which pedal is the gas? Spend a ton of time on BR, review lessons, take PTs, join study groups, and ace the LSAT and get into an amazing law school. That's all there is to it. People end up spending more time gathering prep material than actually studying, which is counterproductive.