So, I've been studying for the LSAT for exactly a year. I've taken almost 50 practice tests during that time. For the past 2 months, I've been taking 2-3 practice tests a week and BRing them (with a one week break during that time). I've never gotten past a 171 on a first take, and a 177 on a retake. I guess I am exhausted and frustrated. I
I'm at a point where I'm not sure if it would be more effective to take a brief break or to continue grinding. My planned study schedule is the following:
today - finish BR of PT 65, drill RC
tomorrow - PT 72
Thursday - BR, drill RC
Friday - PT 67 retake
Saturday - off
Sunday - BR, drill RC
Monday - PT 76 retake
Tuesday - BR, drill RC
Wednesday - PT 75 retake
Thursday - BR, drill RC
Friday - off
Saturday - lightly drill PT 74
Sunday - lightly drill PT 74
I'm tempted to take the rest of today off, and do a retake tomorrow to boost my confidence instead of PT 72 (since I've heard this is an especially difficult LSAT). Thoughts?
I did want a 180, but I don't know how feasible that is or if I'm capable of making a breakthrough within the next few days. Right now I just want to be able to score in the 170s for the real thing and avoid having to do a retake.
Comments
Take the rest of today off, see how 72 treats you, and I'd even advocate splitting the rest of your retakes up into separate sections, do like 2 sections a day maybe? And really use those to focus on your mechanics. I think you need to focus more on fine-tuning at this point and less on volume. Especially at your score range, just doing a bunch more PT's isn't going to really make the difference—it's in refining the remaining rough edges in your process/understanding. On the whole, this is a fine plan, but I would taper and get more focused leading up to the exam.
73 was not any kinder. I had to sit out of everything LSAT related to reset my mind. When I went back into it a week later, I scored my average again on 74.
You know how to sit for a fully-timed PT; my recommendation is to just drill 72 as full length sections so you lay eyes on the questions. BUT, I'm only speaking from personal experience, so others may have more valuable insight with more datapoints than just me.
That's interesting....the folks at top law school forums are big advocates of taking practice tests, and see that as the only way to improve. I'm actually really worried about my endurance, and have started using two RC sections per test (that's my worst section) to make myself improve.
Keep doing PT's but sections are often better ways to identify habits and work on breaking/building them in a more focused way.
today - off, rest
tomorrow - drill sections of PT 72
Thursday - PT 67 retake
Friday - BR 67, try to redo BR of 65, drill RC if you can
Saturday - off
Sunday - retake 76
Monday - BR, drill RC
Tuesday - drill
Wednesday - retake 75
Thursday - BR, drill RC
Friday - off
Saturday - light drilling
Sunday - light drilling
One thing—make sure that every time you do a PT you do:
1) A warm-up, same as you'll do on test day (I did one LR section, one passage, couple of games in the hotel room right before I walked to test center)
2) A 5th section
3) Start the test at the same time as you'll likely start the real thing (2pm in your case since June test begins at 1.30 I believe? Or 30 minutes after the administration/show up time)
4) Keep track of what you eat/drink and when. See how you feel in the PT.
What really got me in the blues was that I've been getting -2 to 0 wrong on LR, but got 5 wrong on a section this last test.
And believe it or not, my 180 was the first thing I did back from a two week break. When you got it, you got it. It’s not going anywhere. And if you don’t, it’s too late now!
But if you’re averaging -0 to -2 on LR, then you got it.
Good advice though man.....I was getting worried that maybe I was getting rusty with LR because I was using my drill time to focus on RC.
I've never had that luck with breaks. Then again, I've been scoring the same range for 8 months now.
But yeah, do whatever your experience has taught you will be best for you. Just don’t let yourself become overly concerned with losing or gaining any knowledge or skills at this point. Neither of those things is going to happen. So just focus on doing whatever works best for you to stay sharp.