@lsat2016 I started studying for the LSAT in late 2015 when I was in college, really only read the Fox Primer and then took 5 PTs over the course of two months that were in the range of 165-169, took the real thing, got a 167, and decided not to go …
@seriously I started by reading the Fox Primer and that gave me a good handle on the format of the whole test from the very beginning - my scores after that were in the mid-high 160s consistently. After that it was a matter of perfecting games. I wo…
I had the same problem and found that my LR and RC scores were relatively consistent but on LG I would be anywhere from -0 to -12 depending on the test. Once I drilled games enough to get consistently -0 my full length test scores steadied out a lot…
To prep for June I've been doing the 60s 70s and 80s PTs in a randomized order so I don't get too comfortable with any series of PTs and get a good spread of more and less recent ones every week, two a week.
I had this exact same issue - been taking the 60s, 70s, and 80s PTs in a mostly randomized order and my score dropped significanly when I took my first couple tests in the 80s. I was averaging ~173 on 60s and 70s tests but then got 168 and 165 on PT…
Spivey posted LSAT registration stats on reddit last week and interestingly, there’s been a big drop in LSAT registrations (June 2020 is down ~25% from June 2019 iirc). It’s possible that deferrals and R&R will increase the competitiveness of th…
Completely agree with Jonathan that you should never ED unless there's a guaranteed scholarship (e.g. Northwestern's ED program). Whether your timeline is realistic depends on your goal score and where you are now. Have you taken a diagnostic yet, a…