The New York Times has a feature called "Room for Debate," which has about 4-5 essays written about a specific topic. This provides good practice for the comparative reading passage.
@ Emli1000 why did you say that you are not sure about using the bibles with 7sage? Did you have a bad experience? I'm just curious to know because I'm trying to figure out which supplemental material is best to use with 7 sage.
After the LSAT I dropped into the essays. Now that I'm done with that stuff...I'm trying to work off the weight I gained over the last year while studying.
...and I still do logic games....and sometimes a bit of LR. Can't shake it.
1. A basic rundown of some of the pitfalls you went through studying for the LSAT;
Biggest pitfalls have been emotional. High achievers often seek validation through performance. We work very hard because we want very good results to prove ...
@StandingOnTheSun180--I don't anticipate that being a problem. First of all, the essays are behind a paywall. Second of all, the admissions officers will have no reason to think you plagiarized.
@david.busis I saw you posted a similar thread about a month ago. Do you routinely ask for essays every so often? I am still revising my PS on my own, and I do not want to reveal it to anyone until I think it's decent.
@david.busis I understand Yale has a question on their application about whether you had any help with the essays or application. In your experience, does answering "yes" have a significant negative impact? Thanks!