Roughly 1 month till the December Test. . .
Posted: Wed Nov 10, 2010 12:31 am
First of all, I would like to say good luck to all of you whom the December 11th Lsat is coming up for. In addition to advice you may offer me, I would like to know what you are all doing in these last 30 days of studying and whether or not you plan to apply for this cycle or the next?
My question/situation: I have already taken a prep class and seen a few questions from basically every practice test so when doing a whole PT or individual sections, there are always a few questions that I A) remember reading but don't remember the answer for... Or B) Questions I remember the answer for after reading only a few sentences of the stimulus. I try not to let(b) get in my way while practicing but it puts me in a weird position. I only have two practice tests left that I have NEVER seen a question from--June 2010 and October 2010. Would you recommend taking one or the other sooner than later? I was thinking I would do June in a week and October a week or so before the test(december 1st or so). Other than those two, I still have the next 10 book that I could work through but I have already seen a bunch of those questions so I am ambivalent to just keep doing practice tests. I am now focusing more on reviewing over questions I found hard and questions I got wrong.
My advice: For me personally, I am doing some of the later prep tests. I have read here that practicing LR by "writing out" the correct answer and the reason it is the correct answer is a good strategy. While I have yet to test the results of this on a new practice test, I have found it ENORMOUSLY helpful in terms of intellectually stimulating myself. Usually I would see what the correct answer is and kind of 'shrug it off'. I would convince myself I knew it. However, writing out an explanation, in my opinion, makes you TRULY prove that you understand what's going on. I would assume that explaining an answer to a fellow study buddy might tackle the same domain but I am doing the whole solo study thing so this is the approach I have taken for now.
My predicament: Since I don't plan to apply until next cycle anyways, now I am thinking of pushing back my test date AGAIN to February!
I really don't think I want to do this. I have had this monkey hanging over my shoulder since the beginning of summer. What I'm thinking I'll do now is prep as hard as I can for dec 11th then after that, if I am stil not satisfied with my score there's always February or June test. But yeah, there's an endless amount of things you can do before the test and seeing as I am PTing anywhere from 155ish-165ish, I know there's still more I can be doing but I am experiencing burn out.
Again, good luck to all of you and thank you in advance for any responses you may have.
My question/situation: I have already taken a prep class and seen a few questions from basically every practice test so when doing a whole PT or individual sections, there are always a few questions that I A) remember reading but don't remember the answer for... Or B) Questions I remember the answer for after reading only a few sentences of the stimulus. I try not to let(b) get in my way while practicing but it puts me in a weird position. I only have two practice tests left that I have NEVER seen a question from--June 2010 and October 2010. Would you recommend taking one or the other sooner than later? I was thinking I would do June in a week and October a week or so before the test(december 1st or so). Other than those two, I still have the next 10 book that I could work through but I have already seen a bunch of those questions so I am ambivalent to just keep doing practice tests. I am now focusing more on reviewing over questions I found hard and questions I got wrong.
My advice: For me personally, I am doing some of the later prep tests. I have read here that practicing LR by "writing out" the correct answer and the reason it is the correct answer is a good strategy. While I have yet to test the results of this on a new practice test, I have found it ENORMOUSLY helpful in terms of intellectually stimulating myself. Usually I would see what the correct answer is and kind of 'shrug it off'. I would convince myself I knew it. However, writing out an explanation, in my opinion, makes you TRULY prove that you understand what's going on. I would assume that explaining an answer to a fellow study buddy might tackle the same domain but I am doing the whole solo study thing so this is the approach I have taken for now.
My predicament: Since I don't plan to apply until next cycle anyways, now I am thinking of pushing back my test date AGAIN to February!

Again, good luck to all of you and thank you in advance for any responses you may have.