I so wish I'd found this website a few months ago! I've been studying since September, taking practice tests and going through the exercises in the LSAT Trainer. My score fluctuates a lot more than I'd like due to timing issues, 179 one day and 166 the next. I've signed up for the December LSAT (less than two weeks to go!) and have started panicking. I feel I'd benefit from pushing the test back to February and going through all the lessons on this site and following the recommended exercise/coffee/steady bedtime schedule. It's too late to change the date but I could withdraw and sign up again. Or, I could do my best on the December test, see how it goes and cancel score or retake if necessary in February. I don't want multiple tests to look bad on my record or to underperform for the real test, but there is also the chance of getting my desired score or just having a another full length test under my belt before February. Any advice much appreciated!
Comments
Good luck.
If you could choose to push back your attendance by one year, then I would say wait until you feel ready. If that's February, or June, or September, then so be it.
Reasons for taking: experience, you might get the score you want, you have a backup if 2015 is your year, no need to find plans for next year in terms of work (assuming you're in undergrad now).
Reasons for pushing: You feel you're not ready, you can push 1 year, you want to watch the legal market another year before committing to a life of student debt servitude.
Good luck either way.
I'm glad you posted because I feel that I am in a very similar situation.
You don't have to decide *yet* about December -- the money is already a sunk cost. You can keep preparing and continue to assess how you feel. It will not be wasted energy because all of the continued preparation goes toward either test.
You always have the option to cancel. So you could take the test as you had planned & then assess afterwards how you think you did. If you thought it wasn't one of those 179 moments & more like one of those 166 moments, then you could decide to cancel. But even cancelling has its up sides -- you've now seen what the stress/the day of the LSAT feels like!