Hi all,
I am seeking some advice as I have been studying on/off for a little over a year now and am only scoring in the 159-164 range, BR in the 165-170's. I have been planning to take this December exam, but decided to post-pone last minute - now really hoping to write in February 2017. I have taken almost all the recent exams, but can't seem to consistently score in the upper160's or break into the 170's. RC/LR are my weakest, LG is pretty strong. I have been doing the same thing - take the timed PT/BR/review. I also occasionally go back to the CC and take timed sections of retakes, but I haven't really seen any jumps in my score in quite awhile. Becoming quite discouraged and thinking this field may not be for me if I'm struggling this much with the LSAT and when it's only going to get harder from here. Anyway, I think a lot of my struggle comes a lot from the mental endurance more so than being unable to grasp the concepts. Any advice of what I should focus on until February - do recent retakes/drill/timed sections/etc. - would be much appreciated.
Thanks guys.
Comments
If you can BR to a 170 than that is your (current) potential. So don't be discouraged!
I'd also suspect that your timed PT/BR/review process could probably be done better. That is just something that can almost always be improved on for everybody. After each PT/BR, you've got to identify the weaknesses it exposed. And don't write anything off as careless or a misread. Those mistakes have to be taken very seriously; this is as much a test of language and grammar as it is of logic. Once you've identified those weaknesses, work to improve on them. When you feel like you have mastered every weakness a given PT/BR exposed, only then should you take your next PT. That PT will almost certainly expose all new weaknesses, as well as inform you that you haven't completely mastered some of the old weaknesses. With that information, repeat the process and don't PT again until you feel like you've mastered everything. Slowly but surely, you'll start to nail things down. So focus more on your response to your PTs rather than on the PTs themselves. That's where the real improvements are usually made.
Mike Kim's RC technique is also much, much more detailed than 7sage's (for example, I learned from him that "according to the passage" means something is literally written in the passage, whereas "the passage suggests" means it will require an inference). It's may also be helpful for you to force yourself to finish each passage with the following markers that high scorers tend to use: 8-16-24-32 min. Spend 4 minutes max reading each passage. To speed up, don't get bogged down by the details. The details don't matter so much as understanding the role a certain sentence or paragraph is playing relative to what the author is trying to convey in the whole passage. If a question asks about some weird details you didn't understand, you can always return to them. But don't waste time trying to understand some confusing science experiment---that's a trap and that's not the goal. The goal is understanding why the author included that science experiment, i.e., the role of that paragraph (strengthening someones argument, weakening it, a counter argument, providing background, explaining the consequences of an event, application of a hypothesis/theory, question, answers to a question, or main point.). At the end of the passage, spend 10 seconds just going over the role of each paragraph in your head, the main point that emerges, and the authors opinion. Thinking of the passage in these abstract terms will speed you up. It will also make it less necessary for you to annotate everything using special notations (I definitely overdid that and it costs time. You may notice JY doesn't annotate much, and also that a lot of questions focus on structure rather than details). It's helpful to go through some practice passages just to test reading for structure (I.e., the roles above) and marking it---after you've tried that with a couple and become comfortable with it, try it on an actual passage with question--see if it speeds you up and helps you in the questions.
As for LR what do you believe the problem is? Are you falling for traps, misreading the question/answer choices, down to 2 answer choices and then psychologically saying I'm wasting too much time and then picking an answer choice? Is it a particular question type that you're missing as well? All of these questions will dictate what you need to do, if it's a particular question type then spend a day or 2 and drill some of those question types but you can never go wrong with BR, if it's done correctly.