Hi Everyone,
Brand new here but needed advice from this community.
I suffer from a chronic illness due to which I have been granted 50% extra time in each section of the Feb 2016 LSAT. So I will get 53 minutes per section rather than the usual 35 minutes.
I recently got really sick which forced me to drop everything and just focus on getting better. Now that I am a little better, I am just beginning to start studying for the LSAT. I know 3 months isn't that much time to prepare for the exam, however, I was wondering what the best way to prepare would be in these 3 months. Should I just dive into the PTs and do as many as I can or should I purchase and go through the 7Sage material and then do a few PTs at the end? I also work so it will be difficult to devote all of my time to studying.
Any advice would be great. Thanks for reading.
Comments
1) Buy the book of tests from the 30's: The Next 10 Actual Official LSATs.
2) Take two of them before you start with theory -- this is using only older tests, so it won't harm your bank of study material. Also, those tests, even though they are numerically far back, are pretty similar to recent tests, especially in LR. LR is a little bit more concrete, RC is slightly easier and has no comparative, LG are weirder and a little bit easier to make the inferences.
3) After you have a decent knowledge of the test go through the curriculum. Do it steadily, but do at least one test a week while you are doing it. You need the IRL test experience in order to be able to understand what the theory is talking about.
4) Also work problem sets (maybe 30-40 questions a week) that focus on the test areas that you are weak based on your weekly test. You can tell this by tracking your scores with the 7sage tracker, which is an awesome tool that breaks out what questions you are getting wrong.
@shainabarber , if you have any questions about the accommodations process, please let me know.