Hello All:
Quick preface:
1. I am taking the Dec. 2015 LSAT.
2. I started at 132
3. average PT score is 152/154
4. Target Score: ANYTHING over 160. Must apply this cycle for a reason in which i can't disclose (too personal), and although i wish it was, it is by no means flexible (i'll give ya a small hint... Uncle Sam isn't too happy with the delayed student visa).
5. Any tips would be greatly appreciated!
EDIT: "The online tutor that gave me this RC advice was NOT
@nicole.hopkins . His name is D*****
I was on a Skype tutoring session earlier this week with a tutor i met from Reddit, his name is D****, and the tutor advised me to slow down and attempt less questions, and work on accuracy... i'm still trying to find my sweet spot.
On the RC section, instead of attempting all 4 passages, I only attempted 2 and worked on accuracy. It felt kind of weird, but based on the last 2 PT's iv'e taken and employed this strategy, It looks good so far.. only missed 2 on this PT (PT67)
On the LG section, I didn't slow down.. you either know it or you don't. i came out -4 because they were all time sinks.
On both LR sections, i attempted as many as i could, but slowed down a bit and tried to internalize every single word i read. Again, it feels a little weird not gunning for the whole section, but i did as many as i could, as fast as i could, just 20 miles-per hour slower, also making sure I was hitting at the minimum 17
Here's the breakdown:
Section 1 (RC) - 13/27 (-14). Did the first 2 passages only. got -2 on all questions attempted. the rest were guesses, and i only got 1 guess right.
Section 2 (LR1) - 11/25 (-14)- Guessed 6 (-6), -8 for questions attempted. -8 = -2 Sufficient assumption, -1weaken, -2flaw, -1 Disagree (crazy one!), -1 Main Conc. , -1 Most strongly supported.
**all questions skipped were in the end except for
#17 (parallel)
Section 3 (LG) - 18/22 (-4) 2 questions were those "rule substitute" prompt (takes too long, guessed and moved on) and the other 2 were diagram errors. will fix that.
Section 4 (LR2)- 16/26 (-10) -6 were guesses and -4 were incorrect ones: -1 Main Conc., -2 Resolve, -1 Sufficient Assumption.
by the way... my BR's are still not going over 160. What is REALLY weird is that when i drill sections or drill sets, i go between -4 and -8, which is what i wish i was.
Thank you for taking the time to help a fellow 7sager out.
for all taking the Dec LSAT, I'd wish you good luck... BUT WE DON'T NEED IT! we are going to crush it!
Comments
How many PT's are you trying to do per week? Are you doing clean copy BR? That's also HUGE. You shouldn't be drilling sections at this point. That's not going to prepare you for the longevity of the actual LSAT, and you need to be building endurance for test day.
I agree with the tutor, slow down. When you BR, make sure you are writing down why each answer choice is wrong. Definitively. Not in your head, write down a reason why. Write all over that BR, diagram, whatever it takes so you know 100% why each is wrong and the right one is right. Also, look at your watch at Q10, Q15, Q20, and Q25. Or every 10, whichever works for you. Get a rhythm down so you know in your head a sense of 1:25 for each question. The Trainer is also good b/c it gives you guidelines for where you ~should be by each question. Obviously that differs for everyone, but it's helpful to have a structure to analyze your timing against, and to make small goals for improvement (E.g., Get to Q15 2 minutes earlier).
Are you doing POL for LR? As in, eliminating wrong answers before you look for the right answer? The LSAT Trainer really made me realize that it is so much more efficient to look for wrong answers first, because it is easier to say why something is wrong than to try and determine for each AC, "oh is this right? It looks right, okay, wait no, here is the flaw..." So you're trying to do two things for each actual AC when in reality it's easiest to just look for why it's wrong, and then come back to the ones that you didn't cross out. Does that make sense?
I applaud your tenacity; you are going to get there, just stay strong and make sure not to burn out!!!!! MAKE SURE NOT TO BURN OUT!!! (make sure not to burn out!!!)
- I finished 7sage premium curriculum.
- I haven't drilled in 2 weeks, i've been PTing since (currently at PT 67)
-I finished reading the LSAT Trainer, and i agree... the best thing i took from it was to look for the answer choices that are "clearly wrong" prior to looking at the answer choice that is "the best available answer".
-I BR every PT. but clean copy? first time i've heard that. what does that mean? as in i BR the same PT but a fresh copy, with no previous answers? I will try that, but holy moly... does that sound time-consuming.
-I am taking a PT every other day, and BR'ing the days im not. at some point next week, im going to most likely crank it up to a PT every day.
It is time consuming. But it's worth it. Quality over quantity. You print out another complete clean copy, and circle the ones on it you circled on the original. You're not doing "more work", but you are eliminating your ego from the equation. You're not tempting yourself to say, I had it right, not even gonna really go through it again. It gives your brain the easy way out, and unfortunately most of us (me included) have brains that will do that every time, even unconsciously. This way, you forget what you even put. You shouldn't even be looking at/considering previous answers when you BR anyway. That's the whole point! Using previous answers either just strengthens flawed reasoning you used to begin with, or it creates a struggle between picking the same answer. Either way isn't good.
I think @nicole.hopkins can get in on this.... 6 PT'S A WEEK IS THE WORST IDEA EVER. Not trying to be mean, I promise, but I did that myself and it did NOTHING for me but burned me out, created frustration, and unmotivated me. It doesn't give your brain a rest, a chance to process anything. You shouldn't be BRing the same day you take the test. I take at least 2, maybe 3 days to BR. I promise that is a bad idea. Please do not do that, from personal experience!
@nicole.hopkins and i had a wonderful phone conversation about a week ago.. she really helped me get my stability back after freaking out.
-If i take a PT on monday, i will be BR'ing it on tuesday.
-clean copy BR: for clarification purposes ONLY, could you please explain the clean copy BR process? as simple as possible... I'd appreciate it!
I know 3-4 PT's a week is pushing it... however, would you recommend anything else? I know my mind needs to rest, but with 16 days left, its kinda hard to!
(insert inspirational/motivational/rocky 'eye of the tiger' kinda quote so mr. Tom wakes up tomorrow, cracks open 4 raw eggs, and looks at PT68 right in the eye and tells him 'this clean-copy BR sure helped')
Okay so clean copy. You take the PT, circling questions you aren't 100% of the right answer or you aren't 100% sure the wrong answers are completely wrong. Okay. Yay, done, woohoo!
If you don't have PDFs, I would advise copying the PT before you start it. Then you either take the second copy, (print off another, either one) and go through and circle the same questions you circled on the original, on your Clean Copy. Put your original away. Then go through, SLOWLY, and pick apart the stimuli, and go through the answer choices, taking as much time as you need to figure it out. Do NOT look at the right answer by any means, sometimes if I'm super stumped and I've been staring at it for a while, or I'm stuck b/w 2 answers, I'll move on and come back to it and then if I still can't figure it out, I pick an answer and then ask on here or something BUT I DON'T CHANGE MY ANSWER! If you want your BR score to accurately reflect where you are without any help, it can't be influenced by that. I just look it up occasionally b/c it really bothers me when I'm not sure.
I'll redo the games too, untimed, I do all the questions, but you can just do the circled ones.
Pretty much it! It's tedious but an important process.
*Cue anxiety* I'm taking it in December too, and it's my second time. I didn't get to all the PT's I'd planned to, but my BR process made up for that because I'm improving faster than I'd be if I was zooming through PT's and not taking the time to learn from my mistakes. That's a waste of PT's. I'd recommend doing a sampling of PT's in the 60s and make sure to hit the 70s, that's what my tutor told me.
I'm no expert for sure but this is a conglomeration of everything I've learned from the amazing mentors on here, tutoring, and just the mistakes I've made. Good luck! We got this!!
Again, terrible strategy. You need to find the low hanging fruit, which can be anywhere. Half of it is usually in the first 10, but the rest is scattered all about. Why spend 35 minutes on the first 17 if the last 5 could be among the easiest in that section? You need to touch 'em all. You need to determine your score, not the test. You need to find the easy questions and get them right in under 60-80 seconds (I'm giving you extra time I don't normally give people here). Then spend extra time on your second looks for challenging questions.
Your strategy is essentially designed to get you -10 to -15 in RC or worse, and -10 to -15 in each LR or worse. That's at least -30 at best, and that's giving you a perfect LG section which sounds unrealistic at this point. -30 is sub 160 on even the hardest tests.
You need to chill out on PT quantity not only because of burnout but because you're wasting PTs with these ridiculous strategies. You really need some more time with the curriculum. So if you have money to burn and really have to go to law school next fall, then take December and do your best but don't expect any miracles. Get back in the curriculum now and fix your problem areas, of which there are many. Attack the test in a sensible and responsible manner and prep hard for February but don't go overboard. You should not take more than 3 PTs a week because you will shortchange the learning process. You really need to get on that clean copy BR and understand what it can teach you. Good luck and if you have any questions feel free to hit me up!
***everyone who has seen this post: @nicole.hopkins was N-O-T the tutor that gave me that advice. it was a different tutor that i connected with via a 7Sage Reddit post. AGAIN, it was not @nicole.hopkins ... so you all need to seriously chill out. Her advice has been nothing but a catalyst for my improvement thus far. ***
He got 12/14 questions he attempted, and it sounds like that was just as good as, if not better than, what he was doing before (otherwise I imagine the tenor of the post would have been very different). That's the entire goal. When those skills solidify, he'll be able to do 3 passages, and then 4. You can't say that 'speed comes with competence' and simultaneously dump on a methodology whose purpose is establishing that competence.
Whether that's on the tutor for not conveying that properly or on the OP for not understanding it correctly (or a mix of both) is not for me to say. But when used properly, the tactic works extremely well. If the goal is the December LSAT, then of course OP shouldn't be doing this. But then again, if the goal is the December LSAT, no RC strategy on the planet will truly fix what ails him in time (and so he should rely on a short-term maximization strategy).
Look, I'm not saying that he's going to make huge gains in the two weeks he's got left. I agree with you that he should be doing more questions. I'm just pointing out that even if the two strategies are "only" equivalent in their outcomes, it's still at least debatably preferable to go with doing less questions because of the time/stress aspect and because doing it that way still leads to improvements, incremental as they may be, when expanding to more questions. If he improves, it won't be because he went back to doing what he did before - it'll be because he learned something from taking it slower and applied it when going faster again. If I were his tutor, I'd probably have advocated for 3 passages and not 2 due to the abbreviated timeframe, but it's clear that he isn't capable at the moment of doing all 4 and rushing things to get to all 4 has some pretty heavy costs attached.
As for why this bothers me, I suppose it's because people take your advice very seriously here, and just like the OP's tutor completely botched his advice by leaving out some critical components, so a blanket dismissal of "that's horrible advice" may well give a lot of people the wrong impression. People remember sound bites, not context. Even if in this case it is firmly understood what the situation is, these posts don't read like "this isn't the right time to apply this advice" - they read like "that advice sucks". The former is at least debatably correct; the latter is flat wrong.