Hey, I totally understand what you're going through. The same thing happened to me a few years ago. I know it sucks. To the extent that you can, keep your head down and keep fighting. Think about how far you've come, and how close you are to achievi…
From what I’ve seen this summer I really like the Socratic method. Professors don’t do it to be rude but they push students to dig deeper and understand legal issues. Plus when someone is being called on everyone else pays attention bc they don’t wa…
I also only did them as necessary. If there was something I was unsure of I would do them until I felt comfortable. But if I knew what I was doing I would move on.
Also to the extent you can try to put a lot of what you learned in previous courses to the side. Use it as a supplement if you can. But if two things contradict then I would stick with 7Sage
I also think Larry was only okay. I did most of the course and found it only somewhat helpful. I would read a little bit for pleasure if you haven’t been. Also skim through some short and happy guides. They’re quite helpful since you won’t learn bla…
Never give up. Your goals are not irrational, as I had the same goals. I took the test three times, significantly under performed two of them, and now am attending HLS this fall. If I can do it you can too.
@10000019 said:
I would purchase it now. It's active for five years. Your report won't be submitted to the school until you specify you want it sent.
Yes it is better to start now. It will also allow you to begin assembling your letters of r…
I think it would! That is highly unique work experience, especially if you can demonstrate how that made you want to transition to law school. In this day and age, work experience is a huge plus and having something truly unique is even better.
There is so much you can learn from redoing tests. Go back through, look at your mistakes, and see how you can improve. Especially with tests that you did long ago, it will feel fresh.
Just a heads up, there are some questions, especially in the more recent tests, that use lawgic differently than the CC does. It requires a more inituitive and natural mindset. It is likely that you got bogged down trying to determine which type of …
One thing that really helped me was figuring out which questions require a critical mindset and which ones don't. The LSAT Trainer was really good for this. If there was a question where I had to be critical, I would make a conscious effort with eac…
Hi!
So I think you may be thinking about the relationship between weaken and evaluate. With those, if you answer one way it should strengthen and the other way should weaken. There really isn't a weakening relationship between RRE questions and wea…
@Ohnoeshalpme said:
If you took a whole hour to do 12 questions and got 5/12 correct, the problem is much, much deeper than question type. I would revisit earlier sections in the core curriculum that focus on logic and grammar. You probably sh…