For me its usually pretty obvious. I never split if I feel like there will be more than 3 boards to deal with. Too much going on on the page to make the time spent splitting worth it. I don't know if that is the right answer...its just what i do.
I struggled with RC, but felt ok on LR and LG. Honestly though, I just have no fricking clue how I did. After months of instant gratification with the LSAT Analytics here on 7Sage's page this three weeks is going to be a monster.
its a separate two page sheet, and then you get the little booklet with the questions. so you get two pieces of paper from them, its the same as the act if you can remember from high school
... took up half of a page. I read it and almost ... at the bottom of the page. After 10 questions, I put ... over all on the last page. I also try to leave ...
No problem. I was so paranoid that they hadn't received mine that I had the page that paragraph comes from bookmarked! Incidentally, it's here: http://www.lsac.org/jd/lsat/score-cancellations
... to furiously rip the front page off in an attempt to ... up ripping the whole front page of my test booklet off ... whom ripped off the front page of the book, however!).
As part of your law school application, a majority of schools allow you to write a one-page addendum describing a specific difficulty you had with your test taking process; in your example your father's situation.