I would personally say 85/86 are fairly difficult and similar to recent exams, more so than 88/89 (from my experience). PT 76 was also fairly difficult with some interesting LR questions.
I highly recommend withdrawing from the November test and not taking the test until you feel ready. I took a"practice" LSAT aka the June test and now regret it because it counts towards my 5 tests that can be taken over 5 years. It's not worth wasti…
as everyone above said, to weaken you need to identify the assumptions the argument makes. when looking at the AC, i would say to myself, "the conclusion is wrong, because ..." and then fill in the gap with the AC. maybe if you try framing weaken qu…
i think the best advice for anyone is learning all the material first, then taking untimed sections and/or full tests until you really understand every question you encounter, then focus on getting the timing down. i wouldn't recommend drilling unti…
to negate a conditional you simply show that you can have the sufficient without the necessary ever occurring. if you're given A --> B, then to negate you say A and ~B. in terms of conditional language in the stimulus, there are times when the st…
i second everything @canihazJD said. paraphrasing as you go and then actively pushing back things you just read that may sound similar/like it expands on/ties into something you may have previously read in another paragraph makes a world of a differ…
I applied April 22 at 1am EST and had my approval by 10am. I got an email with the subject "Accommodation Letter Generated" that directed me to log into my LSAC account. When I logged into my account, on my home page there was a new section titled "…
Hi! I saw that you said you have accommodations due to your anxiety disorder—would you mind sharing with me what the process/price was for getting accommodations?