I'm very eager to ask the question below when I attend this Thursday's personal statement webinar with 7Sage's resident expert, @david.busis. But I wanted to throw it out to you all, as well, to get your thoughts on the matter.
The LSAT's dark and full of terrors... so come talk about it! General questions, specific PT questions, law school application questions--all fair game. Only thing you have to do is join in; thankfully, there's some handy instructions below:
Thank you C janson, The some...not version is ... it and reading what C janson wrote but there are several ... this question, I prefer C. Janson way of solving it, because ...
Hi goalis180, aside from what c.janson said, I would recommend taking more recent PT's (36 and up) to more accurately represent the more recent exams. I used the older Pts to drill as to not waste any of the fresher copies for timed PTs.
Spoiler Alert: Principally Principles is also in the works. Brought to you by the law firm of Janson & Hopkins. (And @nicole.hopkins is totally fine with being the second name on the wall...)
I worked on the section which I did the worst on. LG and RC was near perfect but LR was terrible(-20).so I did a few tutoring sessions with Corey Jason (can't find his tag) which were extremely helpful, and I've seen vast improvement.
I've been studying for a while but managed to learn a couple new things from Corey to incorporate into my studying - thanks and hope we'll have another one of these with you to get to the RC sesh!