You probably didn't.
But in case you're feeling this way, I want to say a couple of things before you cancel your score.
First of all, congratulations on completing the LSAT. What an exceedingly difficult challenge—but you did it! For what it's worth, I am proud of you for your hard work over the months and your accomplishment today. I wish I could shake your hand because I would do it earnestly until you said "J.Y. stop it."
Please get together with your poor friends whom you've been neglecting for the past x months and drink your collective faces off. On you of course. I mean that literally as in have your friends drink things off your body. And also in the sense that you should pay because you've been such a bad bad friend.
If that's not appealing, please get together with your friends and spend a lovely and sober evening together not nourishing budding alcoholism. But you should still pay for whatever it is.
Okay, on to business.Your score will likely be a couple points lower. I'm sorry, but that is how it goes. It's completely normal to feel stressed out on test day and that's likely what causes the "test day penalty" that everyone talks about. Objectively, that just happens.
Subjectively, though, your stress might distort your impression of that fact. It might distort your impression of your performance by overemphasizing the negative. You fixate on things like how rushed you felt, how much you guessed, how you never guessed on PTs, that one LR question that you just couldn't figure out, etc. That's what contributes to that dreadful "I f***ed up" feeling. But don't let that get to you. All of that has already been taken into account under what we call the "test day penalty".
If nothing objectively terrible happened, like you had a seizure or heart attack during the test, your city suffered a major earthquake, the guy sitting next to you was so frustrated with the 3rd game that he stood up, ninja stared the proctor in the leg with his sharpened
#2 pencil and yelled "F******** EVERYTHING!" and stormed out of the room, then mostly likely, you did just fine.
It has to be fine because the LSAT is a very consistent and reliable test. And that's a good thing. Why would PrepTest whatever be "special"? It can be "special" only in so far as any of the other PrepTests were "special" and you've already preptested those other "special" PTs.
So there it is. If you're thinking about canceling your score, I hope you'll read this a few times and think about it carefully.
Comments
This post really put my mind at ease...at least until I get my score!! I just want to say no matter how I did thank you so much for what you have created on this website and how much you have helped me. If I get in to law school a large part of it will be due to how much your videos have helped me so thank you thank you thank you.
The way I see it, this was just dress rehearsal for Oct. The Oct test doesn't stand a chance.
So long, 180.
The good news is that I still have only burned up like 20 PTs (none of which are after like PT65).
The bad news is that RC is always the thorn in my side, and I felt unusually good about it today.
I have read over on TLS that some people have had luck with requesting a hand grader. Supposedly if they notice an obvious pattern they will make an adjustment for you. That doesn't sound very LSAC like, though.
And lucky you for grasping this material so quickly.
Suddenly dreams of T14 with $ turn to nightmares of the moment I realized what I had done.
I think it really depends on your post-game analysis of what happened.. wherever you found yourself waffling is where you need to work.
If only I had a few mins to spare at the end of all of the sections. I could have corrected my terrible, terrible, mistake. (or at least looked at how bad I actually screwed up instead of having to wait a month)
What were your overall thoughts? I thought it was a pretty easy test (especially LR). The last LG was a bit odd though, tbh. I can see myself having accidentally screwed something up there without realizing it.
Hopefully you killed it today. How did you feel?
Stephanie: You have mistakenly defined aberrance; for something to be out of the ordinary, it has to cause quite a bit of stress. The JUNE 2015 administration definitely caused quite a bit of stress, which certainly implies aberrance, and furthermore, unfair expectations on LSAC's part.
Stephanie's response to Jeffrey's criticism is most vulnerable on the grounds that her argument
A) Regards a condition required to give rise to a phenomenon as something sufficient to give rise to a phenomenon.
Completely neglects to address the evidence that Jeffrey cites.
C) Relies on the assumption that something cannot be out of the ordinary without being properly titled aberrant.
D) Assumes that, because Jeffrey smokes meth, Jeffrey must not have an accurate perception of the JUNE 2015 LSAT.
E) Fuck this; I'm taking JY's advice and tossing back a brew.
Not the experience I wanted to induce
"my goal was to have my score investigated by the LSAC because it increased so much."
^Amen to that
The one thing that did surprise me though was a kid right before the exam started. He was called upon (as our proctor read our names allowed) to verify that we were there. He got up and said that he wasn't ready for it and that it wasn't time.
To all of my fellow December takers: take a deep breath. Just like with the prep leading up, we're all in this together!
https://media0.giphy.com/media/C9kaenqtqgo4E/200.gif#40
Bump for my Feb '17 peeps.
@"Cant Get Right" Thanks for bumping this. I flipped a rule in LG1, and it was eating me up yesterday. Caught it when I went back to finish a skipped question, even though I swear I double checked the rules the first time. This is a habit I worked to break, and I got caught up in the test-day excitement. At worst this means I bunked all 5, but I got the chance to switch a couple with an educated guess after amending the rule. Time ran out before I could check the rest, but it is possible that these had nothing to do with the rule I flipped.
@"J.Y. Ping" This helped me to solidify my decision not to cancel. This was my first take, and the rest of the test went really well. Hopefully it is just a few points (or less... I can dream) lost, and I still get an acceptable score on my exam! Based on my confidence in the other sections, I think I'll know the reason why my score lands where it does, even though Feb is undisclosed.
Thanks to 7Sage for all the great help in prepping for a stressful but awesome day!
https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/originals/ac/82/34/ac823467fcdce199ae6651b632eaee56.gif
Bumping again!
bump! very helpful.
Bump. For everyone
Wow. I really needed to read this. I had a really shitty day/post-LSAT weekend and was just talking about possibly not going to law school and returning to teaching. How terrible is that? If I don't get into law school, I have to go back to middle school kids! Yikes! Im just going to take a few breaths, let it go and start fresh again tomorrow
is it important to consider how a low score might hurt your LSAT average? i know most schools take the top score, but the average seems to be important as well. only reason i ask is because this was my third time taking the test, and i'm relatively certain i did worse than on my second pass, which ended up being10 points higher than my first. i'm somewhat comfortable with that score now.
It's my understanding that while law schools will see all of your scores, the only one that actually averages them is Yale. With that being the case, I would sit it out and see how you did!
Bump
It always feels like you did awful and you should cancel. Don’t let the nerves get to you! There’s very little down side to just letting your score be what it is.
What if the nerves got to me during the exam and I guessed like 3/4 LG?
I took the December exam. I choked on the LG section. The entire 4th game I guessed, and for a handful of the questions from game 1+2 I wasn't entirely confident. I thought I went double digits in LG, but I ended up with a -8. Not good at all, but my performance in LR+RC was consistent. I ended up with a score that was within my anticipated range.
I wouldn't cancel over a handful of questions wrong in LG.
I needed this! Thank you!