Hey everyone!
I started the core curriculum on Sept. 26th and so far I've only completed about 10 percent of all the curriculum. I'm currently on the Weakening/Causation questions which are giving me a hard time. I'm a junior/senior in undergrad and I'm planning to take the June 2017 exam. However, I feel that I'm moving too slowly because I have to balance out all my other work while putting in 2 to 3 hours 4 to 5 days a week of prep. When I do study, I'm usually doing question problem sets in which I manage to complete only a few because I take a lot of time typing everything up in a word doc while blind reviewing to fully comprehend the problem (which I truly recommend because it really does help with learning). Should I take it slow and keep doing this, or should I just move on to another section and try to finish the core curriculum as my main priority? I have 7 months until the June LSAT, but at this pace it seems as if I'm never going to finish the core curriculum in time to start doing practice tests lol.
I know some of you will tell me to just go at it slowly and take my time and wait until I'm at my target score, even if it means taking a year off after undergrad. I have seriously considered this and it is an actual possibility for me. However, I'm graduating undergrad a bit behind as it is, and delaying law school will only extend my years of schooling into my late twenties which I truly would not like to do (I just want to work!!). What do you guys think?
Comments
However, others on the forum say do all: https://7sage.com/discussion/#/discussion/8434
I think you should focus on your grades now and set a test date for whenever you are ready. Who knows if you'll be ready by June? If you're not ready, you're not ready. I think if you want to work you should study hard for the LSAT, get into a good law school, and then you'll be able to get almost any legal job you want. However, on the flip side of that coin, rushing to take the LSAT and scoring poorly will almost certainly lead you to a poorly ranked law school with terrible employment stats.
I also think that you should take time off before law school to get work experience and see if being an attorney is what you actually want to do. Find a job as a paralegal or law clerk somewhere. Either way, work experience will look great to admissions officers. Most importantly, it will help you get a job out of law school. Something that doesn't often get discussed a lot is how hard it is for many K-JDs to secure jobs after law school. Legal employers always prefer candidates who have a couple years work experience under their belt to those who don't.
Love the mindset and attitude - it will take you far!
A big theory of mine is that almost anyone decently smart can prep hard and do well on the LSAT. However, so few people are willing to grind and put in the time. Often these same people will be the ones who go to poorly ranked schools and fail the bar and ultimately end up unemployed. That is why the LSAT is such a good predictor of success. Aside from evaluating your reasoning/reading abilities, it also evaluates your ability to dedicate yourself to your studies and work hard.
Good luck!