Try drilling questions in the questionbank. Filter on whatever question type you are interested in, using the old LSATs, and only level 4 or 5 difficulty. I feel like this is what helped bump me from consisntely scoring low 170s to mid-to-high 170s.
Print out some Problem Sets or use the QuestionBank to build your own PTs! I hate studying Logic Games as they're my weakest section so I try spreading them out in bursts throughout the day.
... and have been using the questionbank to redo logic games. However ... it shows up in the questionbank?
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> Also ... is done on a per question basis.
those "0 minute sections" are completely redundant, those were just there before the questionbank existed. Now that the questionbank exists, you can use that for all of your drilling needs, hence the "0 minutes" marked next to those sections.
I believe you'll have to create your own problem set. Go to the questionbank and select all the questions from the desired PT and section you want to do, then create the problem set.
... with a specific type of question. It varies each time ... the difficulty level of each question is by clicking resources on ... "Create Problem Set for from QuestionBank" you can find the section ... be able to see the question difficulty in analytics.
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... the videos for its corresponding question type. It would be less ... , do drills with the same question types.
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> ... "? How many questions from the questionbank would you set up for ... each question after going over the videos ...
... several questions from the same question type, repeatedly until you feel ... the questions from 7Sage's questionbank or from the practice tests ...