... best, I prefer using the “Pacifico Method.” In short, you do ... .
I prefer the Pacifico Method because I’ve found ... />
I use a simple Excel spreadsheet to track my scores ... more concrete example of the Pacifico Method. Also, if you have ...
... above, I prefer using the “Pacifico Method.” In short, you do ... .
I prefer the Pacifico Method because I’ve found ... />
I use a simple Excel spreadsheet to track my scores ... more concrete example of the Pacifico Method. Also, if you have ...
... this, I prefer using the “Pacifico Method.” In short, you do ... .
I prefer the Pacifico Method because I’ve found ... />
I use a simple Excel spreadsheet to track my scores ... more concrete example of the Pacifico Method. Also, if you have ...
@blanklaw I don’t think the binder is necessary or useful anymore. When this post was made, LSATs were administered on paper and Pacifico was practicing on paper. Now that the test is virtual, you’re absolutely right that you only need an excel sheet.
... this, I prefer using the “Pacifico Method.” In short, you do ... .
I prefer the Pacifico Method because I’ve found ... />
I use a simple Excel spreadsheet to track my scores ... more concrete example of the Pacifico Method. Also, if you have ...
... love affair with Excel. So if you have Excel and would like ... 'm excessively proud of my Excel formulas to accomplish this, so ... if you're a fellow Excel nerd, please put me in ...
I excel at Necessary questions, but fail miserably at Sufficient assumptions. Are there any techniques that'll help me with these? I mostly have a problem on the ones that don't require formal logic.
... hours hitherto (can corroborate with Excel spreadsheet). This doesn't include ... hours hitherto (can corroborate with Excel spreadsheet)," figures into the argument ...