I'm a strong advocator for this. In the past, RC was my weakest section and was often due to the fact that I would simply out of time from spending too much time reading the passages. It helped me understand crux of the passage faster and figure out…
If you think you did poorly (~154) and don't mind sitting out until next cycle to have a better chance to increase your score, then yeah you should cancel. I think UofA and UofC both average multiple LSAT scores. Just my 2 cents and I'm also applyin…
@Kristina . The December curve is breakdown of your raw score and lsat score. Usually when people talk about the "curve," it often refers to how many you can get wrong and still get a 170 lol
^ think he's referring to the first question where you use the different rules from your stimulus to eliminate to get the right answer. I.e. eliminate all that arn't A before B, then next rule to eliminate all that have L last etc.
It depends on the proctors scheduled for your centre, generally any drink you bring along with writing utensils etc. must be placed into one ziplock bag with the label removed and cannot exceed 20 oz/591 ml. Where I previously wrote allowed us to d…
How do you quote people? :S haha.
But this is what I noticed from the 50's and 70's, there are more curve breaker questions dispersed throughout the test in the later tests.
LG.
- There is the introduction to the substitution/ rule equivalence qu…
Can't remember by verbatim the exact procedure step by step, but essentially they walk you step by step what section to fill out. For example, they'll say "turn to the front page and look at box 1, fill out your first and last name." A minute later,…
I would strongly recommend you do a couple preptests from the 70's before you attempt to write the dec lsat. The 50's are not representative of what you'll see on test day.
There are two kinds of biconditionals; Always together and always apart.
Always together = A B. This means there are four possibilities. If A then B, if B then A, If not A then not B and if not B then not A.
Always Apart = A Not B. This means i…
Since English is your second language, maybe you should pick up a subscription for The Economist, Newyorker, and/or Wall Street Journal for extra practice. The content and style kind of resembles the LSAT' RC passage sections. http://7sage.com/how-t…
I studied for about 5 months. I started studying beginning of May and took my first preptest early June after reading the Powerscore Bibles couple of times. I stopped for a bit and resumed again end of July while using the 7sage curriculum. I took a…
I used to be in a similar situation as yourself. My first diagnostic test was a measly 147 while reading the Powerscore Bible trilogy. After signing up for 7sage and going through the curriculum and doing another preptest, I scored only a 152. After…
We know we have to pick a max of 5 people (could be even less) from the group of 7. However, nowhere (until you read rule 3) does it say whoever you pick ("chosen"), will they have to do a task. You could have picked G, H, I K and L, but decide G ju…
What pt's are you doing? Theres a noticeable difficulty spike as you progress through certain pt's. For instance, pt 57 and so on there's the introduction of substitution/replacement equivalence questions designed to act as curve-breakers. The logic…
More like everyone is awake now and mashing f5 lol
and kaplan tweeted they're coming out today! :O
https://twitter.com/KaplanLSATPrep/status/524260123414626304
Just a quick summary of what helped me improve with my timing:
1. RC - Read faster and retain a quick sentence summary of each paragraph while trying to understand the big picture/Main Point. Check out 7sage's Memory Method for retaining more and B…
The LSAT Geeks from Manhattan are awesome in LR explanations. Another great source for LR explanations (and sorry for hiajcking your thread) is LSATHACKS. http://lsathacks.com/explanations/. Free explanations from PT 62 to 72