On the serious note - what I did was I ignored everything in the books and it helped. I read through the questions stems first THEN read the passage. I drilled through loads of PTs using this method as a practice, and by doing these I developed a se…
@tejpat717 I took a 1 month break catching up on the housekeeping stuff. While on the break I did not even think about LSAT and did whatever I wanted to do on my free time until I got bored with it - the key here was doing something enjoyable that …
Take a break and go for whatever you feel confident. If I was you I would go for April. I was rushed to take October and I decided to push it to Jan. Taking a break and getting back into it helped me a lot and got me averaging in my dream score rang…
For me the only way was to drill drill drill and know how to set up and answer every game. You are on the right track and keep in mind LG is the easiest to improve over a short time frame
What I started doing not from too long ago was to ignore what is on the books and skim the question stems and answers first (in less than a minute) THEN get into the passage doing the usual (summarize P in my head). I used to do -6~-8 and this seems…
@This_is_Hard sorry for TMI but it was based on a true story - I kept an empty jar under my desk but didn't want to lose my human dignity by pissing in front of a camera so yeah... lol
Happy holidays btw!! I never read that book although I heard it was good bc I was always on the crunch. For me, I'm not the sharpest tool in the shed but I did get my score up by doing PT as a routine. Think of it as building your muscle; you won't …
Parallel flaw: What I would suggest is while reading through them, to write down conditions and negations, as simple as ( A -> B; B/ ->A/; or more if you can write fast), memorizing what each letter stands for on the stimulus on the run, and t…
what I do is I try to cross out all the wrong answers before I proceed. That way I know wrong answers are definitely wrong, and the only right answer is definitely right