hello everyone, I am averaging in the 160-164 range and trying to bump my average a couple points before the September test. I recently took a prep test and score a 153!, I do not understand, I did terrible in every section, lows across the board. I don't know why this happened but now i'm seriously reconsidering taking the test in September. Has this kind of random drop happened to anyone else, I am freaking out here
Comments
I'm sorry to hear that happened to you man. Don't let it bum you out too much or let it start freaking you out. First of all, bad days/flukes happen. It isn't like you suddenly aren't ever capable of a 164 again. I'm a big believer that if you can do it once, you are capable of doing it again and again with practice.
On prep tests where we don't perform as well as we would have liked are the prep tests that can teach us the most. Throughly blind review it and see what caused these mistakes.
If you don't feel you will be ready for perhaps the most important test you will ever take, postpone!
Maybe make December a new tentative goal? This test is the last thing you should be rushing to take. You have the freedom to take it when you are 100% ready to score your goal. And don't let anyone else try to convince you of otherwise. You got this
1) You're tired
2) You had an off day
3) You need to step away from the LSAT because you've been studying too hard for an extended period of time
4) That particular test was slightly more difficult for you
5) Bad testing conditions
6) You somehow managed to do the seemingly impossible - you forgot a ton of LSAT skills overnight, which translated to a drastic deviation, south of your average.
Notice how 6 doesn't seem very plausible? Try relaxing for a day or two, then take another PT and see how you do on that one.
For example, I'm averaging in the 168 range. Last week I scored a 162 out of nowhere. I felt down, but on the next test, I scored a 169, which is back to my average. This kind of variation happens, so it's best not to think too much out of a single data point.
Honestly, it's a blessing. It shows you that you still are struggling in some areas and THAT'S AMAZING TO FIND OUT BEFORE THE TEST and not on test day.
BR the hell out of it. Take inventory of other factors. Did you sleep enough? Did you have enough water? Was there a lot of noise where you took the test? All these things can affect PT scores, especially as you start to get higher and higher scores. good luck