It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!
@"Alan Cheuk" said:
The problem sets are new (and packaged better), and some of it is old. @Pacifico is right on the button that we are going through PT 17-35 to extract the questions in a more systematic way. Before we had a loose selection of questions from PT 10-35 making up the problem sets.
The old problem sets were created without LSAT Analytics data, but now that we have information available, the new problem sets will use pretty much every question from PT 17-35 (way more questions than before). They also slowly ramp up in difficulty, so the early problem sets are the easiest ones, and then you slowly get to the harder ones.
Right now for the new problem sets Premium students get easy problem sets, Ultimate students get the easy and medium problem sets, and a TBA course level will get the easy medium and hard problem sets. The new problem sets also incorporate the LSAT Analytics data to make reviewing your answers easier.
Existing students get to keep access to the old problem sets (under "Old Problem Sets"), and get access to new problem sets if Premium or higher level. There is overlap between the old and new problem sets, so if you try both, you will see repeats.
We are still in the process of migrating. We've got the LR ones pretty much done, but are still working on RC and LG.
@Pacifico noticed a bug where Analytics wasn't linking to explanations (http://7sage.com/forums/discussion/3052/site-changes#latest). That's not a change but a mistake (sorry!). I'm working on it
I hope this helps clear things up!
Comments
It's not that big of a deal. I would simply prepare the next day's drill sets while chillin' following that night's study session. Kinda get into a nice routine that way.
Thanks for your help!
@coreyjanson the LSAT Trainer has a great breakdown of categorization, and I think that's where @nicole.hopkins got hers from.
1) We have to switch constantly between Lessons and Old Problem Sets, instead of moving linearly through the subject matter
2) The completed Old Problem Sets no longer count against the overall course (the percentage doesn't change), meaning I have no way of telling whether I am scheduled to complete on time.
Solution: those who started 7Sage before the switch should retain their full curriculum list without having the new problem sets inserted. Users should be able to switch between whichever curriculum they prefer, either of which would have correct course-completed statistics up top. Merely adding the Old Problem Sets as a huge list is not helpful.
7Sage was attractive because it was efficient. This is not efficient. I just spent two hours screen-shotting "Questions as Videos" into my own PDFs, then giving up after scanning the new problem set list and realizing I was going to spend dozens of hours just prepping materials instead of using the PDFs I already paid for. (I don't have hard copies of the tests, only the 7Sage PDFs I purchased before the license expired)
Please fix.