Before I can get into my actual concern, I have to setup a sort of lengthy background story, so you lovely person taking your wonderful time to read this post could grasp a better understanding of my concern.
:O
So a
week before this hectic spring semester ended, my school was offering our very first LSAT discussion panel hosted by Princeton Review. I was immediately drawn to the event because I thought, "hey. LSAT. Me likey" and because I was in serious need of guidance for the LSAT. Also a quick note, I had already set myself up for a mediocre attitude towards preparing for the LSAT because students I have spoken to prior seemed content with their scores in the 150's and told me that a condensed 3 months studying would be sufficient. I am currently a 20-year-old senior with a 3.7 GPA (salty about my GPA because I could have done better :P) who is scheduled to graduate May 2017.
Anyways back to the story, once the event finally rolls around, the PR marketing guy, who seems extremely chill and intelligent, basically tells me that LSAT is my life, and I should have been preparing for it yesterday. My stomach dropped at this point because I was appalled at how naive I was to waste precious LSAT studying time. The PR marketing guy then tells me that once I have finished taking my finals that I would need to register for the September LSAT immediately so my scores could be sent in with my law school applications to be accepted in time for fall 2017. Once I left the event, I felt both under pressure and motivated to start the LSAT journey. So of course once the semester ended, and I prolonged my LSAT journey about a week and a half due to physical and mental exhaustion, I began freaking out. The PR guy's voice was lingering in my head about how I needed to register and secure my seat ASAP and because of this roadblock I could not function properly. So I register and pay for the September 2016 LSAT to relieve myself of this lingering pressure then I heavily did some research on which LSAT study program I should invest in, and there I was, feeling great about everything. However, after reading multiple discussions in this LSAT program, I realize that I may have shorted myself studying time, and the pressure is back on.
I also now realize that I have an option to pay a fee to reschedule from taking the test in late September to December. While rescheduling to give myself more studying time, which I am unsure if I truly need it, I feel as though I may do poorly because of the exhaustion that might come from fall semester. I am taking 5 classes next semester with a 10 hour internship, which counts as one of those 5 classes, and I work 25 hours a week at night. Am I safe for taking the LSAT in September (I technically started studying last month), or should I try and reschedule for December, or am I just doomed for mediocrity?
Thank you for reading, I look forward to your responses! :-)
Comments
To help others potentially formulate a response:
-Do you have a goal score?
-Have you taken any diagnostics or any timed sections?
-If so, what were your scores?
Good luck and stay in touch!
If you can afford to spend your limited free time studying for the LSAT, and you're OK with potentially waiting until next year to apply, then study at a slow but deliberate pace and let the rest fall into place.
If you are after a 165 and had a 158 diagnostic that would yield completely different advice than a 145 diagnostic and a 171 goal, or even a 145 to a 160.
Everyone has different goals, so what are yours @"tiffany barragan"?
The next big question I have, is why the rush to go right from undergrad to Law School? It sounds like you are taking 15 credits plus working 25 hours a week. The absolutely, and MOST important thing you can do is keep the GPA you have and do everything you can to improve it. Maybe consider a year off after school for the LSAT and focus on adding 2-3 easier classes to bump up your GPA.
Unconventional, I know, but you need to maximize your LSAT score (depending on your personal goals) and your GPA. The LSAT score can change, once you graduate your GPA is set in stone.
Secondly, my target score is at least in the 160's. Let's just say 165. I scored a horrible 140 on that very first prep test given at the beginning of this course; however, I knew I messed up the entire diagnostics test when I was taking the test because of the environment I was in. I NEVER make excuses, but this time it was just extremely horrible when I was taking it, so that's why it's hard for me to say what my actual diagnostic is. I was just planning to finish the course and then take the proctored prep tests to see where I'm actually at.
I also didn't do the BR because I thought it was supposed to be an exercise for the other prep tests then I saw the syllabus schedule and realized I just screwed the entire order of things meant to aid me. Before I watched all of the explanation videos for the June 2007 test, however, I paused each video (I was in a better state then) worked out the answer then would listen to J.Y.'s explanations. I did apply the BR method to that and got mostly all the questions correct. I wasn't under the same time pressure, of course, but I did try to answer within a certain time constraint.
To answer your next big question, it feels like a rush but at the same time it doesn't feel like a rush. It feels completely natural for me to jump straight into law school because I know I'll have a summer break to recover in-between (sounds kind of lame I know). I find it hard to relax by pacing myself, which is why I have been taking the maximum load of classes I could possibly handle while working.
The LSAT isn't as difficult as I thought only because mostly all of my undergrad courses have somewhat prepared me for some of the skills that are tested. That plus the methodologies taught in this course are the only reasons why I feel like I can achieve a great score given the amount of time I have between now and then to take the test, but I may be completely off and going about this the wrong way. My concern atm is less my GPA and more my LSAT score.
You have many options:
1) Shoot for September and hope for the best.
2) Postpone and hope that you're ready for December.
3) Keep your September date, study your butt off, and, if you're not even close to your target score by mid August, withdraw. Don't register until you're ready.
My advice? Go with option 3. Take it from those of us who have spent tons of money registering prior to being ready. It sucks.
You spent 4 years, give or take, working on your UG GPA. Don't let that go to waste because you feel pressured into taking the LSAT before you're ready.