Hi all, I am currently registered to take the September 2016 LSAT and I have been studying but I just don't know if I will be ready to meet my maximum potential score by this time. I plan to attend law school in the Fall of 2017 and I was wondering if, even after taking the September test, it will be too late for me to apply to schools with my December score?
I don't want to take the exam twice, however, I think this is the best way to maximize my score and allow myself enough time but I also don't want to postpone until December and end up regretting not taking it twice.
Is the December 2016 test too late to use to apply to law schools?
Comments
My advice is to get your apps finished before you sit for the December exam. That way you can press submit immediately after achieving your goal score.
Good luck!
However, if you don't know if you are going to be ready, I would suggest to postpone until you are ready and have the confidence it takes to do well on this test. And I see your concern with not wanting to take the test twice, and I share the same desire. So I decided to not work towards a date, but rather a goal. I told myself I wouldn't sit for the LSAT until I am scoring in the 170s.
Once I decided this my stress level went from 10 to about a 2 overnight. As a result, I was better able to study and be more effective with my studying because I no longer had to sacrifice anything for the sake of time. I can comfortably go through the amazing and detailed 7Sage course, repeating lessons if I feel I need, and doing all the drills multiple times, or until I feel like I own the question type I am working on.
This test is too important to take without being 100% ready. It is not an easy thing to sit out an entire cycle when you intended to apply this cycle. But it is often the best decision. The old cliche that "law school isn't going anywhere" is completely true.
You mention in your post the best way to maximize your score is to take the test twice. Well if you want a practice run, take a timed-recent PT at a local/college library. But I don't think you should waste a take just for a trial run. That said, the best way to maximize your score is to prep, PT, and Blind review until you are consistently scoring where you want to be.
If your mind is made up for September, then I won't give you the whole spiel on not taking until you are 100% ready. if you are scoring in the mid-160s with only a few weeks prep, you are obviously a good reader/understand logic and have the potential to increase your score up into the 99%-tile. But I guess it all depends on what your target score is and how fast you progress. I just am of the opinion that it is better to only take the test once you're consistently PT'ing at your target score. This way you save yourself the stress of a retake and don't waste a take.
Just remember---you can always postpone and take in December and still apply this cycle
That's a good mindset, but don't sell yourself short.
rentdetriment is too damn high.Yup, that's what many people do (including myself). If you want, you can supplement the LSAT Trainer by Mike Kim as a secondary source (really excellent book and compliments many of the 7sage material) but that's only when you finish 7sage. I think you'll do just fine with the starter pack, it contains the same curriculum as the other packs but with less drills/pt explanations.
A remarkable self-study guide for the self-driven student https://www.amazon.com/dp/0989081508/ref=cm_sw_r_other_apa_mU2OxbEM3XHK5
Honestly I'm very picky about books that teach you material, but the Trainer made learning how to tackle the LSAT very understandable for me. I'm also finding it compliments 7sages approach which is why I recommend people read it after completing 7sage just to reaffirm the material if need be. I wouldn't for example supplement powerscore with 7sage. Hope this helps