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elena-lev

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elena-lev
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  • Yes, you can leave it charging. No, you don't need to print anything. Just have your ID. As far as blocking notifications, your proctor will do all that for you. The way they block notifications is by going all the way up in the top right corner o…
  • I'd suggest getting through the easier ones first to warm you up — just make sure you don't sink too much time into any one question. If it's taking you way longer than it should, flag it and move on.
  • One thing I would suggest is to see which question types you're getting wrong most often. For me, it's Argument Part (AP) and Parallel Reasoning (Para). Then create some problem sets for yourself that include harder questions that fall into those qu…
  • According to LSAC, 9am. See the bottom of this page: https://www.lsac.org/lsat/lsat-dates-deadlines/october-2020-lsat-flex-deadlines-united-states-including-puerto-rico-us
  • Some schools will let you submit four letters!! If you need to or want to choose just three, maybe try to gauge how much schools will get out of each letter. Will the professor provide them with information that will let them know you will succeed? …
  • Once your transcripts have been processed, you can see an Academic Summary/Academic Report, which will include your LSAC GPA.
  • Sounds pretty straightforward, but keep taking them! I found that doing practice problems on the 7Sage interface rather than in a book allowed me to get used to the online format. Take as many problem sets and practice tests as you can! Also a quic…
  • You can take an LSAT Flex practice test with three sections on the 7Sage platform (just click 'Simulate Flex'). Alternatively, you can log into LawHub where you'll be taking the test and take a practice test on the same interface as the original tes…
  • Would recommend going through the strategies for LG and practicing games to allow you to practice that strategy. Every day I would recommend drilling a full section. If you went over time or got answers wrong, watch the explanations then do that gam…
  • I totally agree with what @ryanegrawe said! Check out with analytics which question types you really need to focus in on. That being said, I wouldn't recommend changing your strategy too close to the test. So if there was another book or strategy yo…
  • I struggle with fatigue and typically find myself to score lowest on the final section, regardless of what it is. My biggest piece of advice is to make sure you take full-length tests to practice and working through what helps you stay focused.
  • You can also sort by difficult level on the 7Sage problem set dashboard! I use the "harder" or "hardest" passages when I want a challenge to practice with.
  • I would suggest that if you don't know a word — move on! Read through it because there may be context clues that pop up after that word that help you figure out what the word means. For most sentences, you won't need to know what every single word m…
  • I'd suggest taking a look at your analytics, which will give you an idea of the question types you typically struggle with the most, and which you should prioritize. Then review those types of questions and run some drills with a lot of them. Make s…
  • @kchurich From my interpretation, you can take it in a room with a TV, but there cannot be a desktop computer in the room, even if it is off, because they cannot monitor that computer. Straight from the LSAC website: "Prohibited electronic devices…
  • If I understand your question correctly, my go-to strategy is to make 1-2 notes for each paragraph in each passage. So, for the first passage I would have a "paragraph 1" marker, and write down any notes I had, then do the same thing for the followi…
  • Would love to join! I'm in the same boat as a lot of others are — averaging in the 160's & looking to break 170.