I know this question is going to be contingent on every person's learning ability, obligations outside the LSAT, and several other factors.
I just wanted to get an idea of how long people generally spend going through the CC of the 7Sage program?
Ideally, if the LSAT is your only main responsibility, and you would like to aim for December administration (Will absolutely reschedule if I feel I am not ready), what is a good amount of time to aim for? The automated study schedule is awesome, but if I schedule it to finish in December then it gives me way less than I can handle. So what is a realistic and doable date to set the CC to complete. I am probably going to upgrade when I can afford to get test explanations, so I am just talking about the CC lessons....
Again, I get millage may vary for folks, but I would feel much more comfortable having a little more guidance on this... I can always adjust it should I fall behind or need some extra time with a question type.
I usually try to put in 4-5 hours/day M-F and 6-8 hours on Saturday. Sundays off completely.
Thanks in advanced!
Comments
Sigh.
I think it is better to take it slow and really do a good job. I just feel like I have no idea where to set my end goal for the CC schedule. I work from home, and I only work from 6 to noon most days, leaving me all the time I need for prep. So I'm really struggling to set a provisional goal when to finish it by. I could sit here all day watching the lessons and be finished in 6 weeks, but I'm not sure that is best... Hmmm
And don't sigh, for you're seeing progress. And that is ALWAYS a positive thing to be happy about. I am still trying to drill the poison from TLS that was instilled in my brain: Basically 3-4 months prep is what is normal and if you take longer you're an idiot... Can't think like that!
Also, I had wished I could have a do-over to do my prep again. And that is why I signed up for 7Sage. Powerscore/Manhattan was helpful, but I wasn't seeing the improvement because the books are balkanized by section and sure enough, I'd see improvement with games, then lose any headway I made on LR. I like 7Sage because it works it all in--as does The LSAT Trainer.
Slow and steady, you got this man!
Take as long as you need. Many people on here ask, "how long should I spend on the curriculum?" and attempt to complete it in the "average" amount of time. This can be detrimental. The curriculum isn't here simply for you to complete. It's offered as a learning tool - if you're not learning while going through it, you're not doing it right.
@MrSamIam why do you think taking extensive notes wasn't worth it?
You got it, bud. That's exactly what you should do. Learn from the curriculum. As you're going through it, do problem sets so that you can determine whether or not you truly understood the skills taught during a lesson and how to implement them.
If that fails, hop on to the forums and ask for guidance, we're all more than happy to help!
@montaha.rizeq Notes work incredibly well for knowledge-based exams, where the goal is to memorize the material. For a skills-based test, not so much. The goal on the LSAT is to learn the skills, and implement them. To give you an idea, I have an entire 500 page notebook filled with LSAT notes. Over the last year, I have never referred back to those notes. Instead, I go back to the curriculum and rewatch the videos as needed.
If I could go back, I would limit my notes to short "tags" - for instance, "refer back to MP lesson, video one for helpful hints on finding conclusion for all question types"
i also take notes on theoretical part taught by Ping.
It helps if you watch videos on 1.2-1.4X!
Are you planning on taking in September?
How are you scoring on LR after finishing the CC? I am really trying to get my LR score down to -2 or better per section.