It has gotten easier. Many of the modern exams have 3 relatively cookie-cutter questions with a fourth question that is miscellaneous but not that difficult.
... although the same types of cookiecutter flaws were used, they were ... . Sufficient Assumption also became less cookiecutter. Some required you to make ...
I second MIT_2017’s advice. Do a few untimed sections, get a sense of the type of questions that are “within your league”. Once your secure these questions, you should be able to get down to
Never ever heard of that cookiecutter review thing! But you should go with the blind review. The LSAT is also a test assessing how hard you can work, so you shouldn't attempt to cut any corners.
I wouldnt use the study schedule its more like a template for you to see and get a guage of how much you should be doing. Its very cookiecutter. I would just go through CC lesson by lesson in order
Seeing a breakdown means seeing a cookie-cutter or generic question/stimulus model, right? So what you’re saying is improvement in speed is largely dependent on drilling certain question types in order to recognize latent patterns.