I've been really delaying making this thread, partially in hopes that I would start hitting the scores I need to soon, and wouldn't need to basically rant.
I started studying in May, finished the core curriculum + all Cambridge packets in 2months, and July 8th I started doing Practice Tests. I've done 8 in total, I do 3 a week, M, W, and F, mainly in accordance with my local university library's schedule. I blind review the lsats the entire day after, so on Tuesdays, and Thursday, and on the weekends I take it a little easier and blind review half day on Sat and Sun. I should mention that my BR scores are never much higher, they're always around 161, which worries me as time is clearly not the problem. I generally catch my silly mistakes in BR, but reading LR I almost always just go with my original answers.
I never took a diagnostic as I didn't want to discourage myself by getting a low score, and also didn't want to do LG without having proper diagramming skills. If I had to guess, I would say it would be pretty low, probably 140s, but I guess I'll never know.
Unlike most of the people on 7Sage, I'm from Canada, and here all you need to get into a vast majority of the schools, even some of the best ones is an LSAT score of 160+, assuming you have a stellar GPA, which I'm happy to say I have. For my particular school of choice, a 162 on the LSAT would guarantee me a spot according to the index score used for this year, and 160 would most likely get me in off the waiting list.
Now getting to the rant part, I'm stuck in a slump. My last 5 LSAT scores have been: 159, 157, 156, 158, and today was 157. The corresponding raw scores were 74, 69, 71, 70, and 73.
According to the analytics I have the most difficulty with Flaw/Descriptive weakening questions, and Law passages (the irony :L).
LG is my strongest section, I usually go -3 and it's usually due to either not having enough time or misreading some rules. RC is weird for me, there are days like today, where I went 20/26, and others where I go 18/28. LR is another weird one, it's all over the place. Average is 66%, usually 17/25, but some days I go 20/25, and today oddly enough I went 19/25, and 15/26.
I've been reading the Trainer, and am on Chapter 10, but stopped after I started taking PTs, will get back to it asap, and try to make sure I read one chapter everyday.
So sorry for this loooooooong background story, but I need help getting out of this slump and I'm so sick of coming home and marking my LSATs only to find out I keep getting 157ish. I'm hoping maybe as long as I keep at it, I'll eventually just increase my score, but I keep thinking like no matter what I do I always end up at the same score. Like days where I rock LG and RC, I mess up LR, and other days I rock LR and mess up RC.
Is there any other material I should get, like potentially read through the Manhattan LR, or go back and review 7Sage core lessons?
By Oct I need to get 160+, and I would even be happy with literally just getting 160, but I'm worried as people say the later tests are even harder, and if I'm scoring 157 on these earlier, apparently easier tests, I don't want to know what will happen later on. Which is why I think I'm going to start jumping around, I've done PTs 39-46 so far, and I think I should do 60s next week?
Anyway, thanks for reading, and I apologize again for making this exceptionally long.
* Oh and regarding time, I generally haven't had a problem with not finishing sections on time, that being said I don't have extra but I somehow always seem to just finish before time runs out, don't get any time leftover to go back to any questions, but when I go through questions I usually pick one without the intention of having to come back.
Comments
I think, from what I can see, you might be doing too many prep tests. You said you're doing them..... M/W/F and doing a full day of blind review, which means M, W, F are exams, T, TH, and S are blind review, but.... when are you doing the actual studying portion of your studying?
I think it would be best to maybe lesson the prep tests to two a week, do a good blind review, and use some time to actually review your weaker concepts/drill questions/increase your accuracy.
Just my opinion though! If you're in Alberta (Edmonton) I would LOVE to set up time with you to meet/review questions/PT!
Also regarding BR, I go through the entire questions again, not just the ones I circled, and I'm usually stuck on the same questions as I was during the actual test, and I still choose the same answers I did, as even with the unlimited time I can't decide between ACs.
@harrismegan I really do agree with you, and I'd love to do just 2 prep tests a week, as I think I could BR maybe not better, but at least with less tension on having to finish in the day. The problem is I want to do prep tests 39-74, and in order to get them all done I have to do 3 a week, especially since School starts up in September and I'll have to limit to 2/week then.
The thing that kinda gets me down is the amount of times I come home from doing a prep test thinking I rocked it, must have hit over 160, then come home and the same old 158 nonsense. I usually BR logic games the same night and I catch the silly 2-3 mistakes I ever make, and think that wow if I hadn't messed up here I could've hit 160, but in reality those mistakes were most likely purposely caused by LSAT writers/time constraints so hard to improve from them.
I think I just have to keep going, keep PTing, reading trainer. I can't drill my weaknesses as I already did all the Cambridge sets (I really should've saved them).
Oh one specific question I had was I just did PT 46 today, what does everyone think I should do next week? I'm debating jumping up to PT 60 just to see how it is.
If you ever want a partner to BR with, I'm down, man. I was in the same boat as you, and just taking time off from PT and just drilling and really focusing on my mistakes has helped me tremendously.
@bSM45LSAT , maybe you already know this info, but McGill doesn't require LSAT as part of the application. If you have an amazing undergrad GPA, awesome ECs and letters of recommendation, you have a good chance of getting in. I am going to assume that you already have all of that. The only other thing required, I believe, is your ability to speak French. If yes, then you have a solid chance of getting in. McGill has an amazing law school along with the cheapest tuition amongst common law schools ($6,500 I think).
In any case, there are still two months till Oct test and I'm sure your scores will improve between now and then if you keep on drilling. You got this, my friend.
I think that's the only place I would disagree with @DumbHollywoodActor, and find the rest of the advice to be really really good. The idea to do an open book BR is one I haven't heard, and I really like that idea, as well as writing out explanations for wrong answer choices. I think if you combine these two methods you could really start seeing some gainz for dayzz.
I imagine this approach would play put something like this:
Take a PT, circle every question that you are not literally 100% sure on. If you are scoring a 161 BR right now, this should honestly be the bulk of the questions. Don't score your test.
During BR, go through each question you are unsure about and explain why each answer is wrong. Concretely. Imagine explaining the test to someone who has never seen the LSAT and is depending solely on your explanations to learn it. Don't move on until you can explain for each question why an answer is correct/incorrect.
Here's where the open book part comes in: check your reasoning right away against explanations some place else. Does you reasoning match? If it does, good stuff. If not, why not? What can you specifically learn from failing to articulate the correct explanation? What was wrong with your thought process that led you down this incorrect path, and how can you avoid misinterpreting the question/choice the next time? Did you correctly identify the conclusion/premises? Did you identify the flaw and can you explain the flaw to someone else? Was you approach to answering the question type the most efficient way possible? Did you fail to spot a term shift? Once you'be completed this process for one question, it's time to do it all over again for the next. And hopefully by continually checking your reasoning with other explanations you can start to gain momentum throuhout the section.
You can then file away these questions/explanations and look back at them in a week or so, making sure that you can continually build on the correct thought processes that you are spending time to develop in the BR.
The other resources @DumbHollywoodActor mentioned are very useful too, and I would definitely visit/re-visit the flaw chapters in the Trainer. I think it's great how this is the first skill The Trainer develops because it pays dividends on the rest of the test. Spotting the flaw is quite possibly the most foundational skill, and if not, then it is near the top. The Trainer's introduction to flaw-seeking is great and the drills provided can take you a long way.
It's really hard to build/perfect new skills, and that's what you are continuously striving to do with your studies. Don't fret if it takes longer than you anticipated.
Good luck!
That being said, what I score in Oct on the LAST will play a huge role in whether I have the luxury to consider distance a determinant in school preference!
Surprisingly for me, games I went 16/23, I usually go -3 so this is slightly worrying, but for the moment I'm going to enjoy knowing that the barrier has been broken!!!!!!!!!
Anyways, totally off topic. I read about your recent achievements and I'm happy for you. Keep up the great work man!
Also I actually live where Thompson Rivers is haha, so I'm well aware of it, it's a new school, but it definitely has its benefits, the general community here is really nice and welcoming.
You're so lucky you live in such a beautiful community. TRU is up and coming and has won some very prestigious law competitions over established law schools like UBC and UVic. TRU law is definitely going to get more competitive over the years.
Oh definitely, I think I have to move out of my current town just to keep my sanity.
I'm glad this thread basically united all the Canadians! Haha
Usually I've been finishing LR right on time, so today I tried to really push myself through the questions. This led me to kinda rapid speed through the questions, and anticipate answers; for the most part I was on a roll. I had 5min to spare the first LR, which has never happened before.
2nd LR was even more insane, I had 10 friggin minutes to spare. So I went back to all my circled questions and kind of sat and pondered them, but didn't end of changing anything, I had a feeling I would not trust my gut and mess up.
Results for LR today were exactly what I always get, -6 first LR, and -7 2nd LR. These scores are basically what I always have been getting on LR for the past like 5-6 PTs, but obviously in those PTs I finish JUST in time.
So now I'm kinda confused. I went into the analytics and it doesn't seem like these LRs are a lot easier than others for this test, so what could be the reason?
Is there some sort of schedule for future PTs that you will be BRing together? I got PTs 60-75 left to do, and 46-56 which I will most likely not get enough time to complete.
https://www.google.com/calendar/embed?src=uo98fv4muqt7l3t87off6q7960@group.calendar.google.com&ctz=America/Chicago
My advice would be to actually slow down. Accuracy is what's most important, not finishing the test. Would you rather reach question 21 missing only 0-1 on these, and have to guess on the last 4, or would you rather rush through to finish on time if that means missing 7?
Reading the stimulus can absolutely not be rushed. If you aren't evaluating the argument completely and understanding all that it's saying, then you're gonna go into the answer choices without a clear view of what to look for--choices that are designed by super experts that are meant to trip you up.
Work on understanding each question and stimulus on its own terms. Evaluate it and understand it. Only then will it be easier to move through the wrong choices because you'll have a good idea of what you are looking for.
Follow everyone's advice here with BR. It's tempting to gloss over it because you may feel better off taking another test, but that's not the case.
Specifically for LR, one thing I've been doing that I find immensely helpful is to look at the wrong answers for questions (both easy and difficult) and think about what would need to change about that answer to make it correct. If an answer to a parallel method of reasoning question is incorrect, consider what it is about the wording or relationship between conditions you could change to "fix" it. This is another angle to mastering the questions; if process of elimination allowed you to disqualify a question, think about what it would take to un-eliminate it.
I made a document with all the questions I've gotten wrong from the last 10 PTs, and will keep drilling them and adding to it as I do more PTs! Thanks for the advice! My goal is actually only 160, anything above that would just be for my own esteem rather than required for the schools I'm trying to get into. I'm now finally PTing at 160s, but I need to get higher in case I drop points on actual test day.
Be ready for it to take forever, but it's very helpful. I have yet to blind review under 170 because of that process.