Hi All- I am wondering how to best drill to improve my score on various sections. I have a book I got from a friend that is the Manhattan LSAT 10 Real LSAT questions grouped by question type. I am currently focusing on questions that according to the LSAT analytics tool on 7Sage says are high priority. But I feel like I am spending too much time on each question type and do not feel like I am seeing a difference in my prep test scores. Any tips or advice on the best way to drill?
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That is a great resource to have for sure. If you are not seeing improvements from drilling, maybe you should go back and assess your grasp on the fundamentals? Have you finished the 7sage course and/or tried a supplementary text such as the LSAT Trainer?
I usually drill questions depending on what I am struggling with at the time, but honestly I did not drill any other question types until I had a solid grasp on Flaw questions.
Once you start PTing then timed PTs along with in depth and excellent clean copy BR is pretty much all you should need. If you suck in one area then use that as your fifth section.
If your LR is that good then there is no reason your RC should be that bad. LR is just a bunch of dickishly written RC paragraphs that you have to employ a host of various skills to answer an finite assortment of questions. RC is just a scavenger hunt for clues and evidence.
If you have PDFs I would recommend going back through your analytics and making a spreadsheet of every LR question you got wrong (25 questions per sheet) and then build fifth sections out of that. I guarantee they will be the hardest LR sections you ever do even if you went through all the answers the first time. For RC you can do the same, just pick passages that you got say -3 or more and then put four of those together for an RC fifth section.
If you feel rushed in RC then you are probably taking too long on the easy questions. POE is very important but when you get an easy question with a quick answer then you need to move on. You have to have some sense of urgency in case you encounter a truly difficult passage. Ideally you want to finish 3 of the 4 passages in under 8 minutes a piece. And you need to learn when to cut bait and move on.
Feel free to hit me up if you have any additional questions. Good luck!
Lol, very fitting term. At times, this entire test can be "dickishly written".
What does drilling by PT mean? Does that mean I should take an entire PT and do it timed, BR it and review the wrong answers and do that everyday (assuming I have enough PTs to do this) instead of going through every section and drilling by type?
Thanks
You should notice patterns regardless once you hit a high enough number of questions completed. You might see the patterns sooner with drilling by type, but I still agree with @c.janson35 that this is essentially cheating your brain out of valuable practice in negotiating the varied terrain of LR sections.