I have the Starter, but my target test date is different from yours. I'd say spend at least a month going through the curriculum at a good steady pace. Don't go through videos just for the sake of going through videos; if you want to speed up the pr…
Have you tried to stick to or go under the time constraints that JY lists in every LG video? Different games take varying amounts of time, as I'm sure you know, and a great way to improve LG timing is to learn to complete easier/medium level questio…
What really helped me in RC was finding a notation system that works for me. Often I'd underline bits and pieces of the passage but of course forget where crucial information was located by the time I arrived at the questions. But finding and adapti…
@"Cant Get Right" thank you so much for this breakdown! Would you say that the 29 - 38 book of PTs is okay for the tier one phase, or should we focus on the 50s PTs instead during this phase? Thank you for sharing all this wonderful knowledge and ex…
Yeah, I really liked the LG section of the Trainer as well, because it gave me a solid foundation on which to build my skills using the 7sage LG curriculum. It's worth at least skimming through for sure.
Are you referring to blind review? If so, blind review is about reviewing only the answers you circled while writing the test. A very thorough blind review involves doing through entire test again untimed. It's ultimately your call, but I think the …
Thank you @kylereinhard for posting this, because I just tried out the highlighter method and was *finally* able to break my frustrating plateau on RC! You're awesome. Happy studying!
I started with the LSAT Trainer and found it to be an excellent introduction/complement to the LG curriculum on 7sage. I suggest that you power through the confusing sections because the LSAT Trainer has an approach that will end probably up reinfor…
@"Ron Swanson" I'm glad I'm not the only one on here who is studying for the LSAT while still in undergrad! A lot of people on 7sage seem to have taken a year or more off to study, which is a great idea but unfortunately it doesn't work out for ever…
@"Alex Divine" said:
My BR's tend to take a bit longer because I use blank copies and don't just BR what I circled, but rather re-do the entire test untimed
Damn, doing the entire thing again? That does sound like it would pay off but that would b…
@nanchito You're completely right. I've set aside the vast majority of my free time for studying, and I'm definitely going to stop studying for the LSAT for a couple of weeks during midterms and finals. It's going to be a bit of a balancing act this…
If you don't mind me asking, how long does it generally take you to do a PT and then BR? I estimated that the PT would take ~3.5 h, the BR ~2 h, leaving about 4.5 h per week for drills and reviewing the core curriculum. I haven't actually done a com…
Thanks guys Somewhat unrelated but could you say the same of the usefulness of doing earlier RC sections? I've heard that they're a lot easier in the earlier PTs, so is it better to focus on drilling RC sections that come after, say, the PT 35 mark?
So basically, the language is different but the underlying logic is the same? That's great to know, because I was worried about spending valuable time focusing on earlier PTs only to find out that they were completely different from the newer ones. …