I can tell you when I will not be studying, whenever a new episode of Game of Thrones is ontuesdayninja wrote: And so my watch begins.

I can tell you when I will not be studying, whenever a new episode of Game of Thrones is ontuesdayninja wrote: And so my watch begins.
Yupp. I heard this from people on the forums taking the recent lsat administrations, I mean from what I read it was not the same games but a return to the same type of games, i.e. rule driven that was seen in the earlier waves. So, yeah I'm going through the LG Cambridge bundle and hoping the drilling will pay off.MAPP wrote:woah! This would be awesome, where did you hear this?ngogirl12 wrote:
AND I have heard that the more recent games are repeating the older LSAT's
As in PTs 1-38?ngogirl12 wrote:
like from the first wave!
Haha I got up to Season 5, I'm saving the rest to catch up with after the LSAT!MAPP wrote:I can tell you when I will not be studying, whenever a new episode of Game of Thrones is ontuesdayninja wrote: And so my watch begins.
I was supposed to take that test, but I was rushing through the curriculum and my scoring went waay down in early November so after much internal debate, I decided to postpone to June (didn't get through the curriculum as quickly as I thought and here I am!) I heard the games on that test were hard! But no I read on the forums that the early 70s some of the games use analysis similar to the rule driven games of the earlier tests. I haven't seen most of the 60s or any of the 70s. I'm saving those for my PT days.proteinshake wrote:do you mean like pattern games? if so, then yes. the December 2015 LSAT had a VERY strange game that messed me up.MAPP wrote:woah! This would be awesome, where did you hear this?ngogirl12 wrote:
AND I have heard that the more recent games are repeating the older LSAT's
As in PTs 1-38?ngogirl12 wrote:
like from the first wave!
+1 Manhattan LSAT forum helped me see a lot of patterns in the question types: MSS (which I really struggled with) and Weaken just by reviewing a lot of the questions.appind wrote:anything that doesn't make one just accept the explanation for credited choice as if it's a presumptive choice can likely be useful in reviewing. I found mlsat forum to be a bit of use this respect.ngogirl12 wrote:+1 a lot of self help books do this too, that's why I stick with the usual ones Manhattan/7 Sage/Trainerappind wrote:yeah, i thought it'd often gloss over some questions with legit debatable issues, as if someone looked at the answer key for the credited choice before writing to come up with reasons to justify it.MAPP wrote:ngogirl12 wrote:
I've looked at the LSAT Hacks site for explanations, but I don't like their explanations I find them to be a bit vague in their reasoning.
I find when I spend a lot of time on a particular question type MSS/Weaken I start to see patterns within the question type. This only comes from reviewing the questions thoroughly though and through periods of frustration. My goal is to be at a very secure place by the time I start PTing lol.
Want to continue reading?
Absolutely FREE!
Already a member? Login
Well you have better self-control than me!ngogirl12 wrote:Haha I got up to Season 5, I'm saving the rest to catch up with after the LSAT!MAPP wrote:I can tell you when I will not be studying, whenever a new episode of Game of Thrones is ontuesdayninja wrote: And so my watch begins.
That's what I'm doing. Just some easy ones with the trainer, then with manhattan and the bibles i'll do the ore difficult problems.proteinshake wrote:for those using the trainer along with the Bibles and Manhattan, are you drilling with the Trainer? I figure I'd do light drilling with the trainer and get more intense when I use the Bibles and Manhattan.
Man, I really need to get on your level of studying consistency and dedication... Seems like you're on the ball with studying!I hope to achieve this in the summer, teaching full-time has got me studying about 2 hours each day and about 3-4 hours one day on the weekends :/ngogirl12 wrote:I spent all of yesterday and today reviewing Strengthen questions. I'm not only reviewing questions I got wrong but also ones I wasn't sure of the reasoning of one of the answer choices. Still, didn't think it would take THIS long.. Siiigh.
Are you going to have much material to study over the summer?ngogirl12 wrote:I spent all of yesterday and today reviewing Strengthen questions. I'm not only reviewing questions I got wrong but also ones I wasn't sure of the reasoning of one of the answer choices. Still, didn't think it would take THIS long.. Siiigh.
Thanks, but just reviewing the questions alone is really frustrating because I didn't think it would take this long! I just want to move on with the material!! It's been all LR and I want to hit RC and LG too and also the other question types.. Sigh.cgra1916 wrote:Man, I really need to get on your level of studying consistency and dedication... Seems like you're on the ball with studying!I hope to achieve this in the summer, teaching full-time has got me studying about 2 hours each day and about 3-4 hours one day on the weekends :/ngogirl12 wrote:I spent all of yesterday and today reviewing Strengthen questions. I'm not only reviewing questions I got wrong but also ones I wasn't sure of the reasoning of one of the answer choices. Still, didn't think it would take THIS long.. Siiigh.
I'm hoping to finish going through material by June and then from June-August I'll just do PT's and work on problem areas.MAPP wrote:Are you going to have much material to study over the summer?ngogirl12 wrote:I spent all of yesterday and today reviewing Strengthen questions. I'm not only reviewing questions I got wrong but also ones I wasn't sure of the reasoning of one of the answer choices. Still, didn't think it would take THIS long.. Siiigh.
Register now!
It's still FREE!
Already a member? Login
Save your money and self study. There's tons of books, videos, and materials that you can use along with the help of people on here! I contemplated on taking a course but instead went the self study route and don't regret it.Doubting Law wrote:Took a Kaplan course two years ago during my sophomore year of undergrad. Diagnostic was a dismal 149, can't remember what my new score after the course was. Not sure if I would recommend taking the Kaplan course again. Does anyone have any experience with other prep companies like Powerscore or Princeton Review? I'm going to be studying all summer and was looking for suggestions/reviews.
Yea I still have my work books from the Kaplan course and I bought the Powerscore Logic Games bible (that's the section I did most poorly on in the diagnostic) and it seems to be really helpful so far... The one thing I like about the live courses though is they hold you more accountable and keep you on a schedule. Also is anyone in this group planning on applying in fall '17?TheMikey wrote:Save your money and self study. There's tons of books, videos, and materials that you can use along with the help of people on here! I contemplated on taking a course but instead went the self study route and don't regret it.Doubting Law wrote:Took a Kaplan course two years ago during my sophomore year of undergrad. Diagnostic was a dismal 149, can't remember what my new score after the course was. Not sure if I would recommend taking the Kaplan course again. Does anyone have any experience with other prep companies like Powerscore or Princeton Review? I'm going to be studying all summer and was looking for suggestions/reviews.
Get unlimited access to all forums and topics
I'm pretty sure I told you it's FREE...
Already a member? Login
The accountability factor is definitely a big one. I thought long and hard about it, but realized that if I can't hold myself accountable to my own future, it probably isn't something I should be pursuing. The courses can still be a good kick start but I wanted to do it on my own, and it has made the self studying way more productive because I have a desire to keep up with it and I constantly strive to do better.Doubting Law wrote:Yea I still have my work books from the Kaplan course and I bought the Powerscore Logic Games bible (that's the section I did most poorly on in the diagnostic) and it seems to be really helpful so far... The one thing I like about the live courses though is they hold you more accountable and keep you on a schedule. Also is anyone in this group planning on applying in fall '17?TheMikey wrote:Save your money and self study. There's tons of books, videos, and materials that you can use along with the help of people on here! I contemplated on taking a course but instead went the self study route and don't regret it.Doubting Law wrote:Took a Kaplan course two years ago during my sophomore year of undergrad. Diagnostic was a dismal 149, can't remember what my new score after the course was. Not sure if I would recommend taking the Kaplan course again. Does anyone have any experience with other prep companies like Powerscore or Princeton Review? I'm going to be studying all summer and was looking for suggestions/reviews.
That's a good point. And yes, that's what I meant haha.TWiiX wrote:The accountability factor is definitely a big one. I thought long and hard about it, but realized that if I can't hold myself accountable to my own future, it probably isn't something I should be pursuing. The courses can still be a good kick start but I wanted to do it on my own, and it has made the self studying way more productive because I have a desire to keep up with it and I constantly strive to do better.Doubting Law wrote:Yea I still have my work books from the Kaplan course and I bought the Powerscore Logic Games bible (that's the section I did most poorly on in the diagnostic) and it seems to be really helpful so far... The one thing I like about the live courses though is they hold you more accountable and keep you on a schedule. Also is anyone in this group planning on applying in fall '17?TheMikey wrote:Save your money and self study. There's tons of books, videos, and materials that you can use along with the help of people on here! I contemplated on taking a course but instead went the self study route and don't regret it.Doubting Law wrote:Took a Kaplan course two years ago during my sophomore year of undergrad. Diagnostic was a dismal 149, can't remember what my new score after the course was. Not sure if I would recommend taking the Kaplan course again. Does anyone have any experience with other prep companies like Powerscore or Princeton Review? I'm going to be studying all summer and was looking for suggestions/reviews.
And onto the second question - I plan on applying in the fall of '16 in order to attend in 2017I think that's what you meant at least?
Despite what everyone has suggested, I still registered for the Kaplan course. I feel like even though it may not be as helpful as others have said, I think I'd regret not taking the course if I end up getting a bad score haha.Doubting Law wrote:That's a good point. And yes, that's what I meant haha.TWiiX wrote:The accountability factor is definitely a big one. I thought long and hard about it, but realized that if I can't hold myself accountable to my own future, it probably isn't something I should be pursuing. The courses can still be a good kick start but I wanted to do it on my own, and it has made the self studying way more productive because I have a desire to keep up with it and I constantly strive to do better.Doubting Law wrote:Yea I still have my work books from the Kaplan course and I bought the Powerscore Logic Games bible (that's the section I did most poorly on in the diagnostic) and it seems to be really helpful so far... The one thing I like about the live courses though is they hold you more accountable and keep you on a schedule. Also is anyone in this group planning on applying in fall '17?TheMikey wrote:Save your money and self study. There's tons of books, videos, and materials that you can use along with the help of people on here! I contemplated on taking a course but instead went the self study route and don't regret it.Doubting Law wrote:Took a Kaplan course two years ago during my sophomore year of undergrad. Diagnostic was a dismal 149, can't remember what my new score after the course was. Not sure if I would recommend taking the Kaplan course again. Does anyone have any experience with other prep companies like Powerscore or Princeton Review? I'm going to be studying all summer and was looking for suggestions/reviews.
And onto the second question - I plan on applying in the fall of '16 in order to attend in 2017I think that's what you meant at least?
Yeah definitely do whatever fits your personal preferences and study habits best. I think people say it's not necessary just so people don't think in order to do well on this test, you HAVE to dump copious amounts of money into material and guidance. Best of luckcgra1916 wrote:Despite what everyone has suggested, I still registered for the Kaplan course. I feel like even though it may not be as helpful as others have said, I think I'd regret not taking the course if I end up getting a bad score haha.Doubting Law wrote:That's a good point. And yes, that's what I meant haha.TWiiX wrote:The accountability factor is definitely a big one. I thought long and hard about it, but realized that if I can't hold myself accountable to my own future, it probably isn't something I should be pursuing. The courses can still be a good kick start but I wanted to do it on my own, and it has made the self studying way more productive because I have a desire to keep up with it and I constantly strive to do better.Doubting Law wrote:Yea I still have my work books from the Kaplan course and I bought the Powerscore Logic Games bible (that's the section I did most poorly on in the diagnostic) and it seems to be really helpful so far... The one thing I like about the live courses though is they hold you more accountable and keep you on a schedule. Also is anyone in this group planning on applying in fall '17?TheMikey wrote:Save your money and self study. There's tons of books, videos, and materials that you can use along with the help of people on here! I contemplated on taking a course but instead went the self study route and don't regret it.Doubting Law wrote:Took a Kaplan course two years ago during my sophomore year of undergrad. Diagnostic was a dismal 149, can't remember what my new score after the course was. Not sure if I would recommend taking the Kaplan course again. Does anyone have any experience with other prep companies like Powerscore or Princeton Review? I'm going to be studying all summer and was looking for suggestions/reviews.
And onto the second question - I plan on applying in the fall of '16 in order to attend in 2017I think that's what you meant at least?
+1 on applying Fall '16, I'd assume everyone on here is on the same boat applying Fall '16 to be enrolled Fall '17.
Communicate now with those who not only know what a legal education is, but can offer you worthy advice and commentary as you complete the three most educational, yet challenging years of your law related post graduate life.
Already a member? Login
cgra1916 wrote:Despite what everyone has suggested, I still registered for the Kaplan course. I feel like even though it may not be as helpful as others have said, I think I'd regret not taking the course if I end up getting a bad score haha.Doubting Law wrote:That's a good point. And yes, that's what I meant haha.TWiiX wrote:The accountability factor is definitely a big one. I thought long and hard about it, but realized that if I can't hold myself accountable to my own future, it probably isn't something I should be pursuing. The courses can still be a good kick start but I wanted to do it on my own, and it has made the self studying way more productive because I have a desire to keep up with it and I constantly strive to do better.Doubting Law wrote:Yea I still have my work books from the Kaplan course and I bought the Powerscore Logic Games bible (that's the section I did most poorly on in the diagnostic) and it seems to be really helpful so far... The one thing I like about the live courses though is they hold you more accountable and keep you on a schedule. Also is anyone in this group planning on applying in fall '17?TheMikey wrote:Save your money and self study. There's tons of books, videos, and materials that you can use along with the help of people on here! I contemplated on taking a course but instead went the self study route and don't regret it.Doubting Law wrote:Took a Kaplan course two years ago during my sophomore year of undergrad. Diagnostic was a dismal 149, can't remember what my new score after the course was. Not sure if I would recommend taking the Kaplan course again. Does anyone have any experience with other prep companies like Powerscore or Princeton Review? I'm going to be studying all summer and was looking for suggestions/reviews.
And onto the second question - I plan on applying in the fall of '16 in order to attend in 2017I think that's what you meant at least?
+1 on applying Fall '16, I'd assume everyone on here is on the same boat applying Fall '16 to be enrolled Fall '17.
Now there's a charge.
Just kidding ... it's still FREE!
Already a member? Login