Something to do with the camera-- connected at first, then the connection was lost. Honestly though, after two hours of sitting and starring at the screen, I am kind of relieved that I am rescheduled. The awful part was waiting nearly half an hour s…
Can't help you with technology, but I can tell you that the exact same thing happened to me today. I also spoke with a technician days before, who said it would be okay. I also am signed up for Friday, and I also will be using the same device.
Need…
My take is this: strong at LR means consistently strong at LR, and even though the flex does not offer the opportunity to double up, being consistently strong at LR is an asset on the flex.
Suppose your range is -2 to -4, and compare that to anothe…
I am kind of in a similar boat with LR. Over the last five tests, I've seen three -4s, and three -8s. Consequently, too, bigger picture, and with the other sections taken into account, I've seen a scaled score fluctuation of 9.
I think many people,…
That is a very generous offer that I hope someone takes you up on. I got a digital subscription to The Economist four months ago and I have seen a two point increase on RC.
I would be interested in the Scientific American pdfs. I've sent my email…
I like RC, too. It's clear to me how this section could be relevant in law school. People give it a hard time because it is not clear that six months to a year could make much of a difference in scoring, and therefore it does not reward merit.
I th…
I second the comments here that suggest that flex is different, as not only is it three sections, but it also involves less blind reviewing.
That being said though, before I decided to do three-sections, I planned for 1 PT a week; with Flex, I'm do…
Yeah, I think engaged for RC hits the mark. Visualisation potentially keeps people engaged, and given the length of RC, disengagement can be a serious liability. It's not that the picturing in itself elucidates, but I think it is more likely to keep…
Yup, you are wrong. July, August, October, and November were all scheduled for in-person exams until their respective dates approached and the rate of Covid did not decline. You might be thinking about the switch to digital but in-person exams, whic…
As a monthly subscriber, I have been considerably out of order. I started with some LR, as the course recommends, and certainly I have seen some progress. But in order to justify my monthly expenses, I needed to dive into LG, as this is my weak spot…
There are also, I believe, multiple tests for the flex period that may or may not have the same level of difficulty, which means that how many you can get wrong depends on which test you get. For this time period there are multiple tests, with perha…
My question would certainly be about the the relationship between morality and law.
I hope you enjoy your experience. I once was fortunate enough to be in a class where we had a Provincial Supreme Court judge talk to our class (BC Supreme Court, I'…
Good question. I have a love/hate relationship with ambiguity on the LSAT.
In your example on PT. 70, does not 'typically' (used once in the stimulus, and once in the correct AC) serve as a quantifier? The stimulus, I believe, allows for some manag…
If either LG or RC exchanged places with LR, by taking up two sections rather than one, then I think there would be a fundamentally different test, where someone who scored a particular score on the normal test might see a score that is quite a bit …
I do not think there any disadvantages to ordering your lessons so that you face your weakest first.
I have mixed and matched a bit in terms of ordering on the CC-- currently, I have done 24 hrs. LR CC, and 2 hours LG. My LR score has not changed …
Yup, thanks for the detailed response Christina.Parchem. What you describe in your second paragraph more or less matches how I handle LR questions of which I am uncertain, with the exception that I probably will reread the ACs that I think are more …
Just a question about the tactic of skipping on LR: when you skip a question on LR, is it skipped entirely? Or do you spend the time, if possible, to eliminate some of the more seemingly wrong answers, narrow the plausible choices to two or three, a…
The American Optometric Association recommends the twenty-twenty- twenty rule, which consists of every twenty minutes taking your eyes off the computer screen, and looking twenty feet in the distance for twenty seconds. Although the LSAT satisfies t…
You might be spending too much time on the answer choices on RC. An LSAT instructor once advised me to go slower on the passages even if it means less time on the questions. The instructor's gist was that with RC, unlike LR, you cannot arrive at the…
Is it really a blank slate? Law schools are not taking kids out of high school who cannot write essays. They are taking high performing students who spent the last four years of their life reading, writing, and making arguments (or doing something s…
I think LR is so varied in its question types that it is still useful to do both. By doing two sections you encounter more questions, and I think this is useful because we simply do not know what kinds of questions LSAC will cram into the one secti…
If the professor had said in class that you cannot consult with other people, as you say she 'apparently' did, then you should simply accept the decision.
The fact that your professor 'definitely' thinks you should appeal could just reflect her de…