Hello everyone,
I'm sort of cramming law school apps, since July is when I decided that I wanted to apply. I started using 7Sage in August.
In the beginning, I was about -3 or -4 per LR section, even with flexible timing. With JY's videos, he has helped me to master LR. On my last PT (I think it was # 61) I went -0 and -1 on the two LR sections, with time left over to spare.
I actually enjoy doing LR now. Every question is like a mini word puzzle
Thanks 7sage,
Steve
Comments
Congrats, Steve!
There used to be a few questions per section that I just didn't get, even during blind review... now, when I see a trap answer choice, I hear JY's voice saying "What?! Why do we care?! Oldest trick in the book!"
Thanks for sharing! Congrats! So I am missing 4-6 per LR section. I was just wondering what your strategy was to have flawless LR sections? That would be a dream come true if I could see a flawless section! Thanks
1) Speed is key. Like JY says, you get 2 chances at every question: finding the right answer and eliminating the wrong answers (aka POE). However, most people only have time for one pass, which wastes their potential second pass. If you get fast enough, then you can take 2 passes and greatly increase your chances of a right answer. The biggest benefit of PTs for me has been increased speed.
2) Reading comprehension. Better vocabulary and reading skills will enable you to read the stimulus once and usually get what it means (sometimes I do read it twice, but only on hard questions). Therefore, I think drilling RC could have spillover effects into LR.
3) Question type. If you can't identify the question type (weakening, necessary assumption, etc.) within a few seconds, then it will be hard for you to get -0 on LR. You won't have enough time.
4) Core curriculum. If you're getting questions wrong during BR, it's worth checking out again.
5) Serious reflection. You have to think about what you got wrong, why you got it wrong, and how to prevent it in the future (I guess this applies to all LSAT sections and probably life in general)
Great advice and very well said!
I love #4 Returning to the CC! This has been what has helped my score in LR go from missing 6 down to about 3 per section.
Can I ask a question too?
How many hours did you study per day&how many questions or PTs did you take before you come to this result?
So nice&congrats
I quit my job a few months ago so I've been studying 6+ hours per day for the last few months
Any advice for increasing speed? I normally run out of time as I get to Q19-20 (21-22 once in a while). My accuracy is acceptable (-2 to -4 on those attempted) but not getting to those last questions, which I would get right have I had more time, really hurts my overall score. I haven't tried hustling for speed so much though as you mentioned which I should try! Any other advice is appreciated!
Congrats on this achievement and best of luck in December
So do you read all answer choices in easy questions or just pick the one you felt right?
I guess you read all answer choices on hard ones but what about for easy ones?
And in long stimulus do you actually read all of them or just skim over the context and focus on only the argument parts?
2) Whether you read all answer choices or move on is a strategy decision. One consideration is if you usually finish the section within 35 minutes: if not, then you probably can't afford to keep reading answer choices. Another consideration is how many choices are left. If I'm 90% sure on A, is it worth reading 4 more answers to gain a tiny bit more certainty? Not if it comes at the cost of attempting other questions. On the flip side, if I'm 70% sure on D, then I'm definitely reading E.
I know what you mean and usually I dont think twice when I see an answer that matches my prephrase or hits the spot; I choose and move on...
However, sometimes I catch myself spending huge amounts of time dwelling on 2-3 remaining choices... Do you suggest I abondon and move on despite the time I already invested into the question? What if there is no time to return at the end to complete it? And how exactly do you recognize a question as "skipable" or hard?
Im really stuck on doing 18 questions and the 7 questions I dont get to could really boost me up if I can get to them
It would be a dream to get to everything without even time to spare lol
Do u think i should just prep LR sections alone to get better? Something like the first 10 Q's in 10 mins, etc...?
Thanks
And yes, if you do get bogged down and are unable to choose an answer, you need to cut your losses. The faster the better so don't agonize over it. For me, if I read through the answer choices and then haven't made any progress on choosing between my contenders within about 20 seconds, it's time to go. Yeah, the only way to develop a section strategy is to drill sections, so definitely do that. 10 in 10 is a great start, just make sure that you realize that that includes skips. So if you answer 9 and skip 1 in 10 minutes, mission accomplished. Setting a timer for 25 minutes and attempting 25 in 25 is a great exercise as well. It will force you to skip if you still find you are reluctant.
Hilarious. JY is a god