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I'm off school until February 1st, so I have unlimited time to do this. I've been studying since August and I really need to take this LSAT exam.
Here is where I'm at -
LR #1 - usually minus 6
LR #2 - usually minus 4
RC - anywhere from minus 3 to minus 7
LG - consistently minus 3 or minus 2
I'm pretty sure LG might get to minus 2, but otherwise I'm fine taking the minus 2. I really need to improve on LR and RC.
LR wise, I've been tracking which questions I get wrong and I mostly get these types wrong:
- assumption
- strengthen/support
- resolve paradox
- weaken
- parallel reasoning
RC wise, I seem to get everything right on the first passage and then the third and fourth are where I have the hardest time. I am pretty sure my mind just gets tired by this time in the test. How do you resolve this problem? The questions I most get wrong here are:
- specific author opinion
- infer from detail
- find an analogy
How do you all recommend I improve? Timing isn't really a problem for me, I usually have time left to check on LR and RC but I am really tired by then. Maybe I should spend more time on each question and more time checking over?
Thank you in advance!
Comments
I'm still working to improve my RC, so I'm right there with you. If you have time to go back on RC, then I'd say spend a little bit more time upfront reading the passage or the answer choices. I would much rather have a better handle on each passage in the moment than have to come back to it later on when my memory of the passage may have diminished. Hope that helps!
@EbethStudent16 thank you! I will try that. Do you know if we can take notes on every section on the LSAT flex? Maybe noting a bit would help me.
@AA114211 - I took the Flex in November and they allowed note taking on every section. Five blank sheets of paper (lined, unlined, or graph) were allowed. I recommend trying to take notes and see how it goes - it helped me quite a bit. Best of luck - I am also taking the Flex in February.
I think you definitely have room to improve. What do you think you are strong on? What enables you to score in the mid-160's? Finding out why you are doing well and how you can make those strengths work harder for you is a good way to get a few more points. Knowing where you are weak reasoning-wise is another good way to improve.
To clarify, I don't mean question types or anything like that. Some people swallow the 7Sage curriculum whole and have a great grasp of how to diagram conditionals and things. That was never me, but I have an excellent understanding of language as an applied linguist and over time made that work for me. There are usually multiple ways to get the right answer on the LSAT, making sure you are using your own strengths, growing them and applying them will help you break 170. So will gaining new strengths.