Hey guys I have done the PT in 60's last year studying for October and December. But now studying again for September I did my first lsat in the 60's and certainly recognized the stimulus. Also when I would predict I saw my prediction was usually correct. I ended up getting like -3 in both the LR sections which is much better than before where I usually get around -6. I am kind of scared because redoing these PT's in 60's now might be a bad idea. This time around with studying I started at PT 35 and completed all the way to PT 59. Any advice would be great
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If it's the former than congrats you have a stronger fundamental understanding than last year. If it's the latter than you have to be real with yourself. During the test, quickly find why 4 are wrong and why one is correct. I really don't see any problem with retakes. My brain doesn't always remember what i read a few months ago. It's the skill you've gained, the methods you've learned that matters.
I found that I often remember I've read the question before, but I don't necessarily remember what the correct answer was, even for questions I've struggled with; maybe especially for questions I've struggled with, because you tend to remember the struggle more than the resolution.
Another point I'd like to make that gets mentioned quite often is that you don't take PT's to get a gratifying score, you take them to learn how to do better on the real thing. As long as you remember that, it doesn't matter whether or not your scores are inflated. What matters is whether you have a better grasp of the material. The shorter time helps with assessing that as well - because some of the questions will be faster, if you give yourself 35 minutes you will have more time left to tackle the hard questions so your score will be more like a BR score. Shaving off some time will ideally leave you with the same amount of time for the hard questions that you would have for a fresh test. Let's say easy questions on repeats take 20 minutes, easy questions on a first take would take 25. To leave 10 minutes for the hard questions you'd time your repeats at 30 minutes and your fresh takes at 35. As your "easy" times go down, time your repeats lower.