Make sure you wake up early enough to get a full meal for breakfast. Also, leave about 30 mins early due to traffic, events may be going on at your testingcenter. & just remain calmed and relaxed. Good luck everyone!
@bstew2002 yes, I'm actually worried about building being renovated during the June LSAT since my testingcenter is downtown and they are ALWAYS renovating something there.
I would keep the same routine that I did for my PTs on Sats and during the week at 12:30 pm.
shower, eat breakfast, maybe a light workout, and practice a few LGs. Then get to the testingcenter early.
I used to live in San Jose but ran into the same problem so I took it at CSU east bay. The campus is super nice and I would highly recommend CSUEB as a testingcenter. Proctors were really efficient as well
@Legal Babe.. definitely flawed. I am not trying to be a dick, but seriously, you can't really hang your hat on that. Additionally, your particular testingcenter being empty doesn't do anything.. the curve is based on all like 20,000 test takers.
I was at my testingcenter from 12:00 to 6:30.... 6.5 hours even though we weren't under LSAC control until 12:30.... 200 people were at our testingcenter so it took time to check everyone in.
The best they can do is give you a refund so you can retake it. Unless proctor/testingcenter is absolutely egregious, nothing else will change -- at least from what I've heard.
Everything you do is dictated by the proctor. When the 35 minutes are up, you absolutely cannot go back and fill in any remaining questions. You will be kicked out if caught.
I got a 35minutes watch and I also have a regular analog watch. I don't know what to expect from my testingcenter because I think it's their first time, so it could be a little crazy. If I have to use a wall clock I'll do that.