https://www.reddit.com/r/LSAT/comments/71zteo/hardest_most_difficult_lsat_sections_ever_listed/
I found this list to be fairly accurate back when I was studying.
This seems like a situation where you should probably hire a law school consultant. I don't think it will hurt too bad based on what you're describing but make sure you own up to your mistake and keep a clean slate moving forward.
I never quite got the timing down even towards the end of my studies, so I can definitely understand your frustration. One thing that worked for me however is that practicing to diagram MBT type questions will definitely speed things up. Those types…
Won't matter tbh, it's more of a tie-breaker if schools are deciding between two equal candidates for one final spot but decisions rarely, if ever, come down to that. PBK students do better in admissions moreso because they have a high GPA, not beca…
I think the Powerscore LR chapter on Parallel Reasoning is worth reading but the LSAT Trainer and Manhattan LR books are significantly better for overall LR prep in my opinion.
The LG bible for Powerscore is worth going through as well if you haven…
Yep, 6039 applicants -> ~1200 admitted -> 314 final class size. In this scenario about 26% of admitted students take Berkeley's offer. We generally refer to that as yield rate.
I think 7Sage breaks it down better here:
https://7sage.com/top-…
Retake, literally just one or two points in your situation will generate full rides in lower T-14s. The time and money it takes to improve is nothing compared to the money saved paying for law school. Lastly, you underperformed due to lack of sleep …
I'm sure it matters at the margins as others have hinted, but the LSAT is the great equalizer. Chances are u will perform according to your numbers based on LSN.
To be quite honest, I don't think you'll regret either decision. However, as others alluded to, your outcome from both schools are going to be the same, especially since you're not going for clerkships. If this is the Ruby, then 100% take it but oth…
Completely dependent on what your LSAT score is come September. All else
being equal, applying earlier is better but an additional LSAT point gained is worth much more. Check out the powerscore analysis below:
https://blog.powerscore.com/lsat/doe…
It looks like WUSTL has been aiming for a 169 median this year based on LSN data:
http://washu.lawschoolnumbers.com/stats/1819
I think you will have a good chance of getting off the waitlist if a substantial number of 169+ deposits elsewhere. Eith…
Agree with @MissChanandler , latin honors makes negligible difference. The only reason a magna might do better than a cum laude is because of the GPA difference, not because of the title. In your case, a 3.92 is above every school's median so just d…
I would always recommend retaking. However, for your next take, you definitely need to diversify the places you take your PTs in. I think a major reason people generally underperform their PTs is because they take them in perfect conditions and quie…
Yeah, you don't have much leverage in this situation, but it is still perhaps possible to get a slight increase. maybe this video will have some useful tips for you from former dean of Penn. Hope you get that increase!
All initial decisions will be out before April 1st for people whose app went complete before Feb 1. Since your friend had an interview in mid Feb, then I am guessing he went complete before February. Historically, one huge admit, deny, and waitlist …
To each their own, but I chose to read each answer choice for every single LSAT question so that I can avoid trap answers. For me, the questions I was missing at the end of my studies were ones I wouldn't have gotten correct even if I have more time…
I had one copy and did each game in a separate notebook. Just more efficient in general and easy to go back and see your old work to check on your own progress.
The exact numerical rank doesn't matter as much as the tier. So I think it'll only really be surprising or matter if a T14 school, for example, drop to T20 tier.
Fool-proof first and keep practicing formal logic diagrams since those are the most trainable. That gap does strike me as a bit odd but it'll close over time.