I am currently studying for the October LSAT. I have taken about 7 full, timed practice tests. My highest score has been a 157. After taking each PT, I have reviewed my incorrect answer choices by watching the 7Sage videos (I didn't follow the BR method). I just recently took the PT 45 and received a 156 (I took it in a noisy environment and was distracted several times). I did the worse on the RC section, which I usually score the highest in but then scored the best in the LG section with only missing 1, so there is a bit of a discrepancy in my score for this specific PT. I decided to do the BR method for the first time and I received a 170 instead. I found the method very helpful and easily realized stupid mistakes I was making during the exam from just not reading carefully. I know that timing is an issue for me, because I understand all of the concepts, but just have issues concentrating during the exam and reading carefully. I was wondering what I should do to help solve the discrepancy in my two scores and bring my actual score up to what my BR score. What can I do to focus more during the exam and not make silly mistakes? I really want a 170 or higher on my LSAT, which is going to be a big leap.
Comments
Other than that just keep taking timed practice exams and really BR them to death. You've only taken 7 thus far so there's still plenty more for you to go through. Just keep charging through those PT's and I'm sure you will start to eliminate more of those stupid mistakes that are easy to make under timed conditions.
It takes a proper diagnosis of your errors to truly improve, and if you are currently scoring a 156/7, then your errors are not simply misreads. The good news is that the LSAT has 80ish tests released so you have plenty of material to work with. Make sure you BR every time; taking a PT without doing so is a wasted learning opportunity.
At the end of the day, you need a lot more timed practice and blind review. A 14 point increase does not come without these two crucial steps (yes, there are exceptions; however, expecting to be an exception is not the best mindset for success).