Hi 7Sagers!
I am scheduled to take the February administration and have a problem. (Don't we all?) For weeks, I've been hitting my target score range (157-160). However, the last two PT's I've taken (74 & 75) have been downhill for me. 150 & 153. (I haven't changed my diet or exercise routines since I was achieving my desired scores). I'm not sure how to handle this/react to it, as the exam is less than two weeks away and the last thing I want to do is postpone taking the exam since I want to apply for Fall admission.
Thanks everyone!
Comments
Now as far as why your scores are going lower recently it's awesome that you've tracked your diet and exercise but how long have you been scoring in the 157-160 range? Like how many tests in this range before the drop. Also how has your BR been during this dip, is it right around where it was before or has it changed too? Finally is there any pattern that you can see to questions that you've missed (misread, ran out of time, struggling with a question type, etc.)? There is nothing wrong with revisiting the curriculum for a little bit before going back to PT's if you feel you're shaky in a certain area, but understanding why your scores have dropped recently will help you be able to score back where you were and then push through and score even higher! Good luck and happy studying!
The fact remains: a higher LSAT score puts anyone in a better position for scholarship negotiations (outside of HYS); decreased debt load definitely makes for a higher quality of life. Statistics certainly speak to the deleterious effects of high levels of debt on stress levels (and accordingly, lower quality of life in most cases).
I have plenty of friends who are T14 grads with T10 law firm jobs who are miserable with $150K+ in debt ($160k + bonus does not stretch as far as the young attorney-hopeful might imagine, given taxes and monthly income devoted to debt service). Many of them regret having not attended a regional school that would have very likely offered them very high amounts of scholarship money coupled with very similar job prospects. But that's because they have the chops to end up in the top 5-10% of a regional and they were employable enough to get those T10 law firm jobs, credentials not entirely making up for factors that might make one a poor candidate for employment (personality-wise, etc.). And they had the LSAT scores that would have gotten them those generous scholarships at said regional schools.
One thing I know for sure: it would be very difficult to service $150k+ in debt on a $70k/year salary. And that is a very, very harsh financial reality to face.
Defining and measuring quality of life; however, I will leave up to another arena of discussion/debate.
With all that said, yes, I agree you should strive for the best possible score for your particular goal. But, for me, it's only a 158. Don't let someone look down on you for having a lower score.
Now with all that said, I dropped a few tests when I had first started reaching my target area. You just have to push through and up your studying! Find out the exact problems (mine were the weird logic games that started appearing) and work to fix them. Good luck to all of you!!