Hey guys,
I'm about to start taking sections with only 30 minutes instead of 35 to give myself more time pressure because
I found that 35 minutes feels a lot shorter during the test day. Has anyone tried doing this? If yes, what benefits
have you gained?
Comments
Hey,
I personally have not started PT'ing yet so I have no experience with this. I will say that many top scorers used this strategy to mitigate any test day timing issues. Additionally, I think it is common for top scorers to implement this so they have time to go back and check answers and do ones they skipped without having to worry too much about rushing.
I personally know of some people who eventually got so good they were finishing in 25-27 minutes for LG and having time to go back over every question. That may be a little extreme, but it certainly helped them chase the -0 we all love so much. Also, I should not that they didn't start off there, but started shaving time off and worked up to finishing this efficiently.
So for September I'm practicing with faster timing - I'm trying for 28 minutes on retakes and 30 minutes on the few "fresh" tests I have left (they are all in the 20's).
I'm hoping that by doing this for several months I'll reset my internal pace to something that would leave enough "breathing" room for test day, nerves and all.
If I'm not mistaken, the greatest benefit to using this method is, come test day, 35 minutes will feel like a ton of time.
And I also secretly like the LSAT - After nearly a year it's become like an intellectual hobby and I look forward to my daily LG practice and my weekly PT's.
The reason why? IMHO the "30min rule" (or whatever pace you set) is more a diagnostic result rather than any magic technique in preparation. High scorers will finish in 30min naturally with high accuracy; simply replicating the 30min will not improve your score without parallel improvements in accuracy. So the real key is to maintain awareness of both pace and accuracy - both are necessary - in order to identify and fix between the two the relative weakness.
What's the fix? Given that questions tend to get progressively harder, and that both accuracy and pace are necessary, I recommend starting with 10Qs in 10min with 100% accuracy, then progressing to 15Qs in 15min with 100% accuracy, and so on, until you reach whatever your goal is. It's about building up rather than setting some arbitrary benchmark.