I feel like someone started a thread like this before, but it's hard to find old conversations even with the search bar. Anyways, I wanted to know for those who have full-time jobs, how many hours are you generally studying a week and specifically a day? I work from 9am-5pm but really wake up around 6am to get ready and then get to work. It is extremely rare for me to leave the office at 5pm, I usually get home by 6:30-7pm. Then when I come home I eat and usually have to do some work at home. By 9pm, I try to start studying but tend to fall asleep. So for those who have full-time jobs, how do you manage study time? I am retaking in October and feel guilty every day because I don't feel like I'm doing enough. Thanks in advance to everyone who provides feedback.
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So that's how I did it while working. Of course everyone's life is different, and I have the luxuries of having an understanding boss, a short train ride to work, and having almost no adult responsibilities (i.e., single and childless).
Now I'm practicing to retake for October. I'm alternating between getting up early and studying at home then coming to work. Those days I wake up early, I stay and study after work until around 6:30-7. Other days I don't study early and just stay a little later to compensate, 8ish. You need to find a balance. So I guess I'm averaging around 3 hours a day, but it feels very manageable.
You're doing work after you come home, you're also doing work while you're at work and on top of that, you're studying. It's a lot. Try out a few routines. Also, it's really not about how long you study, but the quality of it. If you can't get into it at 9 or 10, don't waste your energy. Hope this helps.
The answer to this question depends on where you're at in your prep.
When I was first starting, I did maybe 1.5-3 hours per day. Then starting in November/December or so, I started doing 3+ hours per day. In February, I went whole hog and started waking up at 6am, LSAT 2 hours before work, then 6pm-10pm M/T/W/F and added LSATurdays, on which I take a PT in the morning, BR it, and then join the BR call. At the peak of studies (when I was in the advanced learning phase) I was doing ~40 hours per week. I started taking Sundays off because when you're doing that much, you can't do it every day or you will burn out hard. Then once I entered the PT-only phase, I started taking 2-3 PT's a week plus BR plus BR group, so that's about 30 hours per week (I also take Thursdays off right now). I'm planning to add in more daily timed practice so that I can "keep my pathways open" but still committed to Sundays off. So the hours will likely go up a bit but BR does not take nearly as long as it used to do, and I'm pretty used to taking this many PT's at this point.
I would be doing myself a disservice if I backed the hours off much now, but I'm also at the point where I have to be very conscious of burn out. So that means allowing myself to take breaks. It's good risk management: the loss in burning out far outweighs the risk in spending fewer hours on LSAT over a few days/week.
Oh, and I'm a single/unattached person. So props/kudos to the marrieds and parents out there. Y'all cray. That, to my mind, would be MUCH harder than having a demanding job!!
P.S JY is absolutely right about having actual knowledge about a subject in general being helpful in RC. I have noticed that i am much more accurate and faster in law passages.
For August/September I went to part time with my job and will be doing the same morning routine, but I'll be off at 1 so I'll be doing 2-8 every day, prep tests on Saturday and on Wednesdays nights.
I guess I should also mention I've been studying for a full year now.
I work 12 hour shifts in a busy emergency department as a nurse from 3pm-3am, which is exhausting. I am having a difficulty organizing my time d/t my work schedule and the educational demands that are required of me to keep up on current medical/nursing practices. I am working on making my study time a daily habit, but I frequently have set-backs. The necessary upkeep of hygiene, oral intake and sleep-sleep-sleep often get into the way of my study time (I know, I should be stronger than that). Sometimes I think nursing is good enough until something jolts me back to my reality and personal goals.
I have tried to study at work during my breaks, but my breaks are frequently interrupted by patients and/or co-workers, especially if I am needed on the floor. It is advised that we do not leave the department in case of emergencies that require more assistance than what is already out on the floor. I often end up with OT when I would just rather take a much needed breather.
For the last two weeks I have been diligently sticking to my schedule and have regained one course week that I lost, I am now only three weeks behind my study schedule. I am hoping to eventually regain those weeks instead of readjusting my study schedule (I have already done this once).
I know that exercise can increase energy and having once been a gym hound, so I know that it will greatly improve my stamina and mood. I have decided to incorporate this valuable coping mechanism back into my schedule and have been doing 2 days per week so far with plans to increase to a max of 4 days per week. I think that this is attainable.
Life is difficult, but I am up for the challenge. My only other option is to shrivel up and barely exist.
I also think it's important not to set unrealistic goals for yourself. If you work 60+ hours per week and have a family then rather than put in 40+ hours per week for LSAT prep, I'd do only 5-10 hours per week and just target an LSAT next year. If you have a job that is supporting you now then you're in a generally enviable position so just remember that the LSAT and law school will be there waiting for you whenever you're ready.
There is nothing more discouraging than not being able to reach a personal goal.
"Pacifico's" advise to set realistic goals is right on point.