Hello!
I apologize if this is a repeat discussion - I saw a few similar discussions here but none that specifically answered my questions. I recently took the June LSAT and received a relatively decent score (164) but am looking to improve to a 170. I had completed the PTs from 62-70 while preparing for the June test (as well as using the Powerscore books) and am wondering if retaking them would be beneficial. I'm guessing there are some advantages to retaking, but I'm wondering how to best utilize the old PTs. Should I retake them first, save them for right before the September LSAT, or switch off between the old PTs and new PTs?
Any advice is appreciated.
Comments
While it definitely sucks to not have as many fresh takes left retakes in general can be extremely useful. When PTing in general, don't fall into the trap of trying to see a high score, but look at the process as pure improvement. Depending on when you first took the PT you're now retaking, you may remember a question or 2 during the test. Your retake score will be about +3 tops of where you'd score fresh assuming there's been a few months between takes.
With that said, if you have 70-77 fresh, I'd recommend spacing out your fresh takes with retakes however you feel comfortable. I would just suggest front loading a bit on the fresh takes and use the retakes more down the stretch because right before the exam you want to be at peak confidence. Nothing worse than getting a bad PT score to rattle you right before the test
Good luck
The more time between retakes the better, but I wouldn't worry about that too much. If you do come across one that you just remember "Oh, I remember this one was D," just force yourself to work back through it until you can say why it's D.
Sure, your scores will be inflated, but who cares? PTs aren't for generating scores, they are for furthering your understanding and building experience. So for where it really counts, retakes are almost good as new. (Almost!)
And, in case no one has mentioned it already, there's very little difference between the recent and older PTs. So don't feel like you need to shy away from the 30's through the 50's. You've got lots of fresh material left, so by mixing in your retakes you can really create an effective PT schedule.