Lessons

Your Study Plan is tailored to your specific studying timeline and starting score.

In the first part of your plan, you’ll work through lessons designed to teach you everything you need to know.

We start with Foundations, where you’ll get a deep dive on key concepts that are the building blocks of LSAT questions.

Next, we work through Logical Reasoning question type strategies and apply them to dozens of real LSAT questions.

Finally, we cover how to approach Reading Comprehension passages and questions efficiently and accurately.

Practice

Once you’ve finished the Lessons phase in your study plan, you’re onto Practice.

Here’s where you’ll work through Practice Blocks, which are sets of drills, sections, and PrepTests. Each block you create is tailored to your specific scores and weaknesses, so you’ll always get the right mix of difficulty and other drill settings.

Pre-Exam

In the final week before your official LSAT, you’ll enter the Pre-Exam phase. Here you’ll get a mix of activities designed to get you into test day shape.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I change my Study Plan?

Yes. In your Study Plan settings, you can change your start date, end date, study days, studying hours per day, and number of Foundations/LR/RC lessons you want to get.

Is it OK to skip lessons?

Of course. Although your default study plan is tailored to your timeline and diagnostic score (if any), your specific needs are unique. So feel free to use your own judgment based on how useful you find the material.

For example, if you’ve already studied a lot for the LSAT before, or are otherwise coming to the test with an advanced understanding of logic and grammar, then it can make sense to skip some of the Foundations lessons in your study plan.

And, if you’re really struggling with certain concepts, then feel free to bookmark the lessons and come back later. You should never feel stuck, because you can always keep moving forward. You can access all lessons in our Lesson Library if you need to come back later to review something you skipped or forgot.

I learn better through doing real LSAT questions, not through video/text lessons. Should I still go through the lessons?

You can always create a new study plan using our “Just Practice” option in your Study Plan settings.

That will throw you straight into practice tests, sections, and drills. Be warned: some explanations might not make as much sense without going through the lessons, and you might need to come back to some lessons later, depending on your pre-existing reading and logic skills. But many students use 7Sage successfully using our “Just Practice” plan.

If you want to keep your current plan but just want more drills, rest assured that we’ve assigned drills involving real LSAT questions throughout these lessons. But if you ever want to do more, feel free to create a drill whenever you want.

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