Scoring lower on more recent LSAT tests--why?
Posted: Mon Apr 26, 2010 3:51 pm
I've taken about a dozen LSAT tests (all strictly timed in proper testing conditions) starting from the mid 1990s and moving forward. Before even starting the tests, I read the powerscore bibles, so I wasn't starting blind. Initially, I was scoring anywhere between 171-176 (averaging 174) on the tests up until test #46, never scoring below a 171. On tests 46-49 I've been scoring 167-171 (averaging 168), and I'm wondering why I've had such a drop in my test scores? Did the tests get more difficult in the mid-2000s, did they perhaps change to attack one of my weaknesses, or is this just a fluke?
Logic games are never a problem--once every 3 or 4 tests, I'll miss a question or two, but that hasn't changed in the newer tests. My scores in reading comprehension have gone down slightly, whereas before I'd average 1-2 wrong on each section, now I average 2-4 wrong. The biggest change for me has been in LR, where I consistently get 2-5 wrong now on each section, whereas I'd average 1-3 wrong before.
I've noticed that in the newer tests they've almost all had 26 questions in LR, whereas the older ones usually were 25 and 25 questions or 24 and 26 questions, and time in the LR sections has, oddly, become more of a problem for me than it used to be. When there are 26 questions, I seem to always be pressed for time, unlike when there are 24 or 25. It seems like the questions themselves are longer than they used to be, too, and that the grading scale is less forgiving than it was earlier (on one of the tests I got 10 wrong but still ended up with a 168). Also, if it makes a difference, my weakest question type is assumption.
So, did the test just become longer/more difficult? And, more importantly, what can I do to remedy this problem? I've started cataloging the questions I get wrong so that I can look for patterns in these questions, but I'm looking for other suggestions on how to adapt and how to speed up in LR.
Logic games are never a problem--once every 3 or 4 tests, I'll miss a question or two, but that hasn't changed in the newer tests. My scores in reading comprehension have gone down slightly, whereas before I'd average 1-2 wrong on each section, now I average 2-4 wrong. The biggest change for me has been in LR, where I consistently get 2-5 wrong now on each section, whereas I'd average 1-3 wrong before.
I've noticed that in the newer tests they've almost all had 26 questions in LR, whereas the older ones usually were 25 and 25 questions or 24 and 26 questions, and time in the LR sections has, oddly, become more of a problem for me than it used to be. When there are 26 questions, I seem to always be pressed for time, unlike when there are 24 or 25. It seems like the questions themselves are longer than they used to be, too, and that the grading scale is less forgiving than it was earlier (on one of the tests I got 10 wrong but still ended up with a 168). Also, if it makes a difference, my weakest question type is assumption.
So, did the test just become longer/more difficult? And, more importantly, what can I do to remedy this problem? I've started cataloging the questions I get wrong so that I can look for patterns in these questions, but I'm looking for other suggestions on how to adapt and how to speed up in LR.