I often find Economist articles to resemble LSAT questions in style as well as content:
http://7sage.com/how-to-improve-your-lsat-score-by-reading-interesting-articles/
... of this method relates to content and is a tiny bit ... the clarification and memorization of content - to make the information really ... way that I lock the content of each passage into my ...
... gaps in the passage's content. Instead, recognize links in ... 's relationships, not in its content.
-As you practice, ... the passage like a legal document. Legal briefs, court pleadings ... . Everything in that legal document is supposed to be there ...
... one side, and all the content is on the other side ... cutting down on diagramming the content. If you are fully diagramming ... a question directly about this content - specifically about a lawyer acting ...
The best advice I can give is relax until the score roles in...meaning place more emphasis on content and FULLY understanding the LSAT...and I do agree that there is NO RUSH to go to law school...
... D: Parts that satisfy our government standards are as poorly constructed ... . Why? Because Clarks parts satisfy government standards---which means if we ...
@jschmi25 This is all i could find relating to canadian schools. It does look a little out of date but still fairly accurate. I doubt there is any predictor sites for Canadian schools.
Here's the only problem. By the time I read this, I had already listened to all of RadioLabs episodes, along with 99% Invisible, This American Life, Freakanomics, etc. I drive a lot at work, and so I digest a lot of content.