After finishing the course syllabus I took my first timed lsat in months and scored in my target range with the BR much higher. Since then I have taken 3-4 more PTs and have fallen each time until the latest PT which is the lowest I've scored since before 7 sage. I am signed up to take the Sep test and was feeling very confident after my initial PT/BR but after these last few tests I'm feeling very discouraged and depressed at the lack of consistency/improvement. What do I do?!
Comments
Don't worry about the real test. What comes will come. Freaking out won't help you focus on building consistency. Remember, you've ALREADY scored in your zone. You don't have to learn the skills, you already have them. What you have to learn is consistency. Consistency is just one more aspect of the test that comes with practice. You have 3 weeks to practice - you'll be fine.
When I first started doing timed PTs, my scores were wildly inconsistent. Now, I can predict my score within 2-3 points after each test just by my gut feeling of how I did in each section. My scores still vary, but I know why they vary and I can focus on the things that are still a bit loose.
Relax. You're gonna be fine.
If you're missing questions in groups, you probably have trouble letting go after a hard question and it's affecting your next few questions.
If you miss questions at the end of a section, you're probably feeling rushed for time. Figure out if you're going too slowly up front on easier questions.
If your diet or sleep pattern is affecting your performance, tweak them.
If you second guess and choose poorly when you do, then stop second guessing.
I'm sure there are more, but these were mine. Hope they help trigger something.
"If you second guess and choose poorly when you do, then stop second guessing."
- This has happened to me NUMEROUS times since I started getting higher scores. I find that I am getting easier questions wrong because I am second guessing myself.
"If you miss questions at the end of a section, you're probably feeling rushed for time. Figure out if you're going too slowly up front on easier questions."
-Also applies to me, I notice that there are always questions usually in the first 5 that I go through the answers, I see the very CLEAR right answer, but choose to continue reading all the answer choices in detail and it ends up hurting me near the end.
So figure out whats affecting your performance and try and fix it before test day. There are still 20 days. You should be able to get at least 5-10 simulated tests in, which should be enough to fix the minor errors and at least maintain, if not improve your scores.