It's normal. Happens to mostly everyone. Especially since we are learning something new. There will be certain sections that you will not understand the first time around but that's okay repeat the lessons again and drill at the end of each section.
... later, I finished my LR sections with 5 minutes to spare ... by the time June comes around. Remember... treat the LSAT as ... clock (i.e. June rolls around and you decide that you ...
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Q1: When you take timed sections/drill, do you time yourself ... up to 35 mins per sections. My Diagramming is alright, not ... , trying to wrap my mind around it. So what happens as ...
... my first plateau took place around yours 157-159. I took ... this time to "shop around" and use different books to ... section or take timed LG sections from the older tests. Get ...
Timed sections play their own important role ... 's—ideally taken at or around the time at which you ... to say ... Not doing timed sections at all because you can ... 't take 4 timed sections in a row. That makes ...
... high scorers don't finish sections early because they have great ... :
Once you collect around 25, make this set of ... developed by doing timed practiced sections
Yeah, ... 's quite different from timed sections, per se.
... really hard to finish the sections, in LG it was a ... section of LR I had around 6-7 questions left when ... I would do full timed sections too side by side, like ...
Another value to redoing sections is a confidence boost.
< ... to do particular questions, retaking sections at least can firm up ... time discounting our retake scores around here. But ya know what ...
It's unwise to attempt to jump to any kind of conclusion based on 1 single test, much less just one section. Take four or more RC sections and compare. That should give you a more accurate view of where you are at.
... , I'm using old PT sections. I'm signed up for ... I'm just using the sections from tests 1-35. sections. @"GSU Hopeful" told me my ... /huge-jump-on-rc-section-help