Just took my first prep test and I am super dissapointed. I have been reading so much material on the LSATS and doing logic games since about June. I am completely shattered of the thought of getting a 140 on my real LSAT in sept. I do not know where to begin to improve my score and I am registered to take the LSAT on sept 27th. My goal is to get into the 160s. I have a 3.55 cum GPA. Any advice would be great. I just picked up both the power score bibles for Logical reasoning and Reading Comp. I work full time and also go to college full time while trying to study for the LSAT.
Thanks
Justina
Comments
Oh, I also pushed my test date to december after signing up, realizing there was just no way I could master this in a little less than two months.
EDIT: Think about it this way, if you get a very good score on your LSAT, you will presumably get some, and probably better scholarship offers. Would you rather spend the extra 350 now, or the extra couple of thousand later?
Smart move in pushing until at least December. If you're not pressed for time and money is tight, then maybe even February. The 7Sage courses are excellent. If you give it adequate time (maybe over winter/spring break if you take the test in February) you will definitely increase your score. @Chrijani7 is totally right about focusing time on LR and LG for the biggest bang for your time/buck, especially since you're crunched for time. RC is typically where most people struggle to improve whereas LG and LR are just a matter of drilling repeatedly.
As for being tight on money: a higher score is your best bet in saving money down the road. Generally, the higher you score, the lower your tuition. If you don't give yourself enough time, or if you don't make studying a priority, you won't do as well as your potential would allow. The more you study and the more you focus, the better you'll do. The better you do, the less you'll owe.
You won't find a less expensive course on the market. If you're a strong self-study mindset, you can do it with books and whatnot, but having looked at the books... none of them compare to JY and Jon. And once you've paid for the books and the prep tests, you've almost paid for 7Sage's lowest priced package... it's worth it.
Full time student and worker is impressive and admirable! Surely with that work ethic you'll rock the LSAT hardcore. Good luck with your goals and keep at it.
The PowerScore LR and RC bibles are, for lack of a better/nicer term, worthless. Return them and use the money from that toward the cheapest 7Sage package. I would sooner buy one of my students a 7Sage package than work from that nonsense ever again.