tbh, I've never had test anxiety until I started studying for the LSAT. I always did well on college tests and usually always finished them quick with no issue. but I think the guy in the vid makes a great point about the third fear: fear of the stakes. you can always just recover from it! yes the LSAT is VERY important, but especially now with the unlimited takes rule, you can always keep in mind that no matter what happens, a retake is always possible and it's not the end of the world.
also, another point he mentions is to just think of it as a learning opportunity instead of a judgement. completely true, I made mistakes my first 2 takes that I noted and this time around for September took them into account and didn't do them again. It's all a process, trust it
Awesome! I saw this video too and it's totally relatable to the LSAT test anxiety!! It discusses how to overcome three fears that underlie the test anxiety syndrome. I customized the three tips to the LSAT experience.
1) The fear of repeating failures is reduced by Blind Review
2) the fear of the unknown is reduced by taking many PT's under exact test conditions
3) the fear of high stakes is reduced by knowing that the test isn't everything and seeing it thru this rational perspective
Great video! This great book "Performing Under Pressure" by J. P. Fry is also really great for those who suffer from things like test anxiety. It really breaks some more of the science down into details and proposes some pretty neat workaround and solutions. Highly recommend if you're someone who gets anxiety while taking this test. Especially those with timing issues.
Love Crash Course, thanks for sharing, this is really insightful! Wish I'd had this when I first started studying for LSAT. I think a lot of my success was due to piecing this together on my own. If I'd fully embraced all this from the beginning, I'd've moved much faster and likely done even better. I think most of the folks who score so high so fast likely do it with a full understanding of things like this. The rest of us have to pick it up as a part of our studies if we want to really break through.
Comments
Thanks for the share!
thanks!
Just watched it!
tbh, I've never had test anxiety until I started studying for the LSAT. I always did well on college tests and usually always finished them quick with no issue. but I think the guy in the vid makes a great point about the third fear: fear of the stakes. you can always just recover from it! yes the LSAT is VERY important, but especially now with the unlimited takes rule, you can always keep in mind that no matter what happens, a retake is always possible and it's not the end of the world.
also, another point he mentions is to just think of it as a learning opportunity instead of a judgement. completely true, I made mistakes my first 2 takes that I noted and this time around for September took them into account and didn't do them again. It's all a process, trust it
thanks again!
Awesome! I saw this video too and it's totally relatable to the LSAT test anxiety!! It discusses how to overcome three fears that underlie the test anxiety syndrome. I customized the three tips to the LSAT experience.
1) The fear of repeating failures is reduced by Blind Review
2) the fear of the unknown is reduced by taking many PT's under exact test conditions
3) the fear of high stakes is reduced by knowing that the test isn't everything and seeing it thru this rational perspective
Yay!
Great video! This great book "Performing Under Pressure" by J. P. Fry is also really great for those who suffer from things like test anxiety. It really breaks some more of the science down into details and proposes some pretty neat workaround and solutions. Highly recommend if you're someone who gets anxiety while taking this test. Especially those with timing issues.
https://www.amazon.com/Performing-Under-Pressure-Science-Matters/dp/B00SYZR4AW
Love Crash Course, thanks for sharing, this is really insightful! Wish I'd had this when I first started studying for LSAT. I think a lot of my success was due to piecing this together on my own. If I'd fully embraced all this from the beginning, I'd've moved much faster and likely done even better. I think most of the folks who score so high so fast likely do it with a full understanding of things like this. The rest of us have to pick it up as a part of our studies if we want to really break through.
This whole video series is wonderful.
Awesome thank you!
Thank you for sharing this!