Hi All,
Just to provide some background information, I have been studying for about 5 months now, both on my own (using Powerscore trilogy and 7sage) and have recently completed a 3 months in-person LSAT course in the city I'm in. When I first started studying I got about 9 questions wrong for an LR section (untimed) and slowly improved to getting 5-7 questions wrong under timed conditions. I thought I was finally on the right track and was looking forward to seeing more improvements until when I recently started getting more questions wrong than I initially started (12-14 questions wrong both under timed and untimed conditions)... I realized that usually when I go back to the questions I got wrong, the correct AC was one of the last two AC's that I was contemplating between before I chose the wrong one if that's any good sign.
I am watching the videos on 7sage again as well as reviewing questions I got wrong but feel quite defeated at this point. I have postponed my September exam to December (thank God!) and am really hoping to get a great score (170+) in Dec. I've been really careful not to burn too many questions but at this point I'm thinking maybe I should go back to early exams (PT 7 to 18) and take as much questions as possible to solidify my understanding of all the core principles. My question is, should I go through the LR sections as an entire section or drill them by question types? Also, is there anything else you guys recommend me do for the month of September? Really appreciate your help in advance!
Comments
Br the method of test-taking review.
An important thing here is your mindset. I too am trying to score high and have hit some rough patches where it seems like I'm not improving but what I have found to be most helpful is to remind myself that ultimately I am trying to add skills for law school not just hit a set score. If I work on skills and use missed questions as a realistic assessment of where I need more skills (instead of worrying because I can't seem to get them right) then the score will take care of itself in the long run. I feel like this takes a lot of the frustration out of the process and opens up a host of possibilities for actual learning improvement.
Additionally, how is your timing? If you haven't taken to heart the skipping strategy advocated on 7sage (CC and an awesome Webinar video) you really should). Working toward 25 in 25 (notice I said toward, not doing right away, after all, we are trying to add skills/improve skills) with the skipping strategy can make a big difference as well.
Hope some of that helps! You can do it, but work on the process of the learning and not the end product.