So I'm aware I'm not trying to get into a T-14 school. I have actually set my eyes on a rather low ranking regional school, where I intend to live after law school. My question is how much studying does it really take to get a 160. I've heard so many mixed reviews that just a few PT's makes breaking into the 60's rather easy. My cold diagnostic was a 152. Looking to hear other people's stories on how much and how long it took to start hitting the 60's. Please just don't say two months, like I want to know how many hours a day/week, what material, ect. Any advice helps.
Comments
No one can tell you how many hours you'll need to study to hit a 160.
I will echo what @blah170blah said about 152 being a great place to start. And I think 3-4 months is a reasonable expectation of what it will take at minimum to get into the 160s. But it is certainly no guarantee.
Here is what I would do if I was aiming for a 160 score.... And at one point I was.
First, I would forget how many hours, months, time, etc. 160 is the goal, so when I get there, I get there. I quickly learned that more time doesn't simply equate to more points. But I do think having some structure is good, and 7Sage's course and LSAT Trainer give you just that.
Materials:
7Sage Course
LSAT Trainer 16 Week Study Schedule
PT 36-77 (feel free to get whatever, just make sure you have what you need to do what course you decide) 7Sage Starter Course uses PT 36-44 and LSAT Trainer uses PT 52-71. But feel free to customize. Just make sure you get some expose to the 60s and 70s, because they are noticeably different than the earlier tests.
Go through the 7Sage Core Curriculum and get a very good understanding of the fundamentals of every type of question you might expect to see on game day.
Go through the LSAT Trainer 16 Week Study Schedule. This can be done in about 15 hours a week of work. So if you can do more, you can get through it quicker, but don't make rushing through it your goal. The 16 week is just a guideline. Mike Kim makes it very clear to customize to your needs.
As far as how much to study: I'd try to study at least 3-4 hours a day. Saturdays I'd study closer to 6. Sundays I would take off completely. Everyone is different though, and some days I put in 8 hours and some 3. It really varies. Especially with work, clubs, internships, schools, having a life, lol....You get the picture
I don't think you will get much out of my story from a 151 to the 160s. If you PM me I'll tell you the details, but it is quite boring. I got the 7Sage course and worked on LG straight for a month using the fool-proof guide to a perfect score. I studied 4-5 hours a day and took Sundays off completely. I think the most helpful thing was beginning to enjoy the process. That and deciding that I will take the test when I reach my goal and making time something I don't have to stress about. It lets the LSAT be something fun and manageable.
a 152 is a great place to start if you are aiming for a 160. What was your test breakdown by section? Were you missing a lot in one particular section?
I started the post as such because some people can be very 'very' aggressive with their opinions when it comes to T-14 schools. As stated those are not my goals so I am not interested in advice to reach the 170+ tier. Sure, if it happens I won't be upset but I will not put in any extra effort past a comfortable 165. As lazy as that sounds, its my reality.
I like this!
Meh. They're great don't get me wrong but no one should shove that down your throat lol.
I actually am considering applying to a local law school for the same reasons as you! honestly, a 165 would prob give me an awesome scholarship too but I'm not going to sell myself short and neither should you. At the end of the day though, if you're fully content with that and don't want to seek a 170 out of the lack of motivation to do so, the choice is yours. I just don't want you missing out on stellar $$!!
So if your goal is a 160, you should follow the same advice for someone trying to reach a 180. I just think the time line changes. So when you are consistently scoring ~165 you can feel comfortable in sitting for the exam.
I think @montaha.rizeq nailed it as usual ---- we don't want you to miss out on $$$. Id you can, try to find out what GPA/LSAT combo resulted in full-tuition scholarships last year and make sure you are aiming for that combo.
Literally me.
Bam!
Best typo of the day! Actually, I hope it’s not a typo! @danielznelson says what he means! And what he means is:
Despair!!
I worked through the Powerscore LR Bible and drilled those types (1 month maybe) and after two weeks of starting to drilling logic games 4-8 hours a day I scored a 161. Logic Games is all I had to do because I didn't see an increase in LR questions.
I would start doing logic games curriculum. Buy a book with logic games by type and drill them (make copies obviously). If you do this you'll improve quickly. You might be able to break 160 doing just Logic Games.
If you don't break 160 and you're scoring at least 14-17 Games correctly then continue working on games but also work on LR.