... the bubble sheet was directly in front of us at the ... : you can try circling the answersin the test booklet itself. Once ... an entire page, then fill in the corresponding bubbles. That will ...
Last time I got my score 3 weeks after I took the test. By the way, your score will be right there in the body of your email. You won't need to log in or anything. So when you get the email from LSAC be ready.
I circle in the answersin my test book for I put them on the sheet so I find it hard to retake -- need to stop doing that. I will probably retake doing BR, which I did not do last time around.
When there are no logical indicators, Work wrong to right. Live in the answer choices. Eliminate them because they aren't supported by the text. Be aware of degree. Words like "most" and "all" and comparisons, in general, are very difficult to support.
Reread the difficult passage and locate the correct answersin the text when reviewing. After doing more passages you'll begin to have a 6th sense on potential test questions
Yeah it's like they don't want you to get all the rightanswers or something... those jerks... I'll show them... I'll strap on my XL Depends and burn that mother down...
i write my BR answersin pencil on my test sheet so it's easier to input the scores and to see the comparison of what i originally thought during the timed process and what i thought afterwards.
Predicting (esp inNA and strengthen) is good but have MULTIPLE FLAWS in mind, cuz there are so many, and the answer WILL be the most obscure flaw in the hard ones.
Pro tip: You don't need to predict rightanswers. When I was studying I rarely tried to predict rightanswers. Instead, I relied on process-of-elimination to quickly strike out the wrong choices and then made an educated guess based on what was left.
... doing is looking through PTs in the 70s to re-familiarize ... , looking through my past incorrect answersin the 70s, doing some LG ... practice in the 70s, and taking 1 ... day with many long breaks in between.
... anything is possible, even late in the year, it's ... setting yourself up for success in what you're aiming for ... need a 5 point jump in the 150s versus a ... in over 99% of the cases. If you can hit the right ... score in February and still get ...
... was encouraging others to chime in on the tentative schedule. Am ... (and you could be right), but in no way does it imply ... effort that people have put in (including you) to help others ...
... all the PTs and resources in prep for June and then ... as opposed to going all in. I don't know where ... better and then December is right afterwards in case test day anxiety ... or minor hiccups come in the way (which I think ...
... the same percentage of correct answersin adjacent difficulty "bands", but it ... . Maybe the distribution of wrong answers counts, or something.
For ...
... get your mind right. The really consistent patterns in the test ... appear more in the wrong ACs than the right ones in ... there are multiple issues in the premises that one ...
Because those issues arise in the premises themselves they don ...
... existing between SA, NA and weaken answer choices inNA questions. ... the answer choice. In the example here, the conclusion ... conclusion is weakened as in the premise 'not consuming ... merely weakens without destroying in order to avoid falling ...
... choice C is wrong. Wrong answers can get weird. Sometimes they ... to catch the tricky ones. Rightanswers, on the other hand, are ... you’re really doing it right, so keep it up and ...
... don't double check your answers. In other words, as soon as ... there is a significant difference in accuracy - are you getting less ... don't double check the answers? If not, you're probably ...