Hi guys,
I have been studying the LSAT for over a year (will be 2 years in June), and I have been taking prep-tests very often ( nearly one a day). I haven't had much burn-out during my study-sessions, however sometimes I find it difficult to de-stress before going to sleep. Sometimes, I would be anxious or concerned if I'm on the right track and stressing about the exam before my sleep has affected my sleep-schedule. I would sometimes wake up in the middle of the night, 3 or 4 am, which would consequently make me feel sleepy and drained during the rest of the day. Do you guys have any rituals to de-stress?
To be precise, a lot of my anxiety comes from the fact that I seen nearly every exam besides PT 77 and I'm concerned about how to make gains from the 160 fresh PT score I got in the recent PT 70s exam back in January, coming from a diagnostic of a 140. In most of my other exams, which were retakes, I would go for minus an average around minus 4 to minus 7 but on the PT 70s I would get minus 12 to 15 on the recent LR. I'm getting a little better in noticing patterns in LG, thanks to the FoolProof method as well as getting better in RC, having scored minus 6 on a fresh prep-test. I did consider doing some drilling for LR, but it wasn't a particular question type so much as it was the way the newer exams that were written that gave me issues. Should I just re-do the PT 70s exam? I haven't BR-ed them because I was urged against so by a tutor I once had before I signed up with 7sage.
Comments
Third, if the LSAT is literally keeping you up at night, you are burned out. Take a couple weeks off or something.
Fourth, if sleep is still an issue, make sure you have good habits in general. Wake up at the same time every day, no caffeine after whatever time, in bed at the same time every night, and nothing with a screen once you’re in bed. If you’re so off your cycle you need help getting back in sync, ZzzQuil for a few nights can snap you back pretty quickly.
Most of us are, more or less, invested in using our PT scores as diagnostics. Where am I? What am I scoring? These are very natural questions and no one is completely immune from these concerns. But the truth is, they don’t really matter. Your goal in PTing should not be to increase your score, but your understanding. When you take a PT, don't ask yourself “Is my score better?” Instead, ask yourself, “Has my understanding of the LSAT and the logical principles upon which it is based improved?”
This is why the BR is so much more important than the PT. Really all the PT is doing is simulating conditions, allowing you to practice pacing and time management, and providing you with a framework to BR. In the BR, you identify, explore, and shore up your weaknesses; you dive deep into the logic of each and every stimulus, question stem, and answer choice where you are at all unsure; you figure it all out. By the end of a proper BR you should be an absolute expert on that particular test. By the end of a proper BR, you should be able to explain that test as well as JY. If you haven’t done that, if you can’t do that; then that test still has value.
As a diagnostic, your used PTs are probably not going to be very useful. But that never mattered anyway. As a learning tool to increase your mastery of the LSAT, they remain extremely powerful.
It can be hard to shift from score driven to "understanding" driven, but thats the goal.