In the beginning give yourself a little more time, with time your speed will increase. Continue drilling and you'll notice that soon you'll be able to finish those questions within the time allotted.
... long have you been studying? Speed comes with practice, proper habits ... an incremental increase in overall speed. One way to measure this ... NOT yield quantifiable increases in speed, then that can indicate a ...
... is really about pure reading speed, that time will be over ... easy to blame reading speed, but reading speed is something that is ... really worried that your reading speed is insufficient.
Also, speed comes from time. I've notice that the amount it takes me to read a Q stem & stimulus is a lot faster now compared to 7 months ago (when I first started studying).
... his LSAT wisdom*). Focusing on speed rather than comprehension will only ... hurt you in the future. Speed is a sign of comprehension ... them all 50-100 times, speed will just come naturally. So ...
@nicole.hopkins don't worry, it's completely normal to lose some speed after having taking a week or two off. Trust me though, the speed will come back quickly :)
This is my favorite post ever. Not only because I am an avid (to put it lightly) DDR fan, but also because getting back up to speed after the breaks is something I struggle with. Thanks Jon!
@"GSU Hopeful" There are a lot of games that help with speed reading and information processing. I've been subbed for 2 months and it's really helped me improve in those areas.
... I do know when to speed through information (background, procedures in ... , other people's argument). I speed up and slow down as ... , I feel, to improve my speed because I am actively processing ...
@geniaguez I gather from both the tone and the data of your post that you feel you're moving at breakneck speed. Any reason you can't postpone and take in Oct/Dec? Why not take time to truly learn the fundamentals and get in some substantive practice?