An *unpublished* study found it helped college students prepping for the LSAT:
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/22/magazine/can-you-make-yourself-smarter.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0
Hey Emily; I live in Tampa and am taking the June LSAT. I'm a college senior in USF--my highest practice test thus far is a 155, but if I took it now I think I'd hit 160. So, that's kind of where I'm at.
I plan on taking the June 2014 exam as well and live in Queens, NY. I'll be primarily self-studying but I'd be thrilled to have an additional study partner in order to help one another. PM me
I read a lot of formal logic in college since I studied philosophy. I believe it helped me skip (or watch at high speed) some logic videos here. I wouldn't recommend formal logic books to someone who has the videos here.
Can you become a paralegal without an educational background? (ie: paralegal courses @ college) I have a business and economics undergrad, is that sufficient to apply? Also, thanks for the response, I appreciate the assistance
What kind of students should look at hiring a consultant or admissions help? If your scores are safely in the median/75% range, and you have a law school advisor at an Ivy League college,would you be okay without one?
I think JY has cursed in videos about two to three times at max. And your argument presumes both a specific definition of professionalism and also that its presence is inappropriate to an audience of college students.