Anyone else going to practice Saturday morning? Forum
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Anyone else going to practice Saturday morning?
I'm planning on dicing up PT61 so that I'd do the first LR on Wed, then half of each of the remaining sections on Thur, then a quarter of those sections on Fri, and the last quarter on Sat morning. Anyone else doing something along these lines?
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Re: Anyone else going to practice Saturday morning?
Maybe. I'm still trying to decide.
- northwood
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Re: Anyone else going to practice Saturday morning?
give yourself confidence. Do easy questions as a warm up. Then walk into the test and dominate.
You all will rock it in december!!!!!
You all will rock it in december!!!!!
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Re: Anyone else going to practice Saturday morning?
In October I didnt look at any ?s that morning and dropped a -5 on my opening LR section, which was well above my average. I think the combination of nerves and mental rust did me in, because the questions weren't that hard. This time I plan to so a few easy ones just to get the LSAT juices flowing before the real thing. Hopefully this time I get the 170+ Im shooting for.
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- rinkrat19
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Re: Anyone else going to practice Saturday morning?
I got to my test center early (hour drive) and did some LR in the car, to wake up and transition from "driving" mode to "thinking." I probably did 10-12 questions, not enough to get bored. I don't think it's a good idea to have the first thing you read all morning be test questions that count. Make sure you've already woken up the part of your brain that absorbs information from printed text.
- sundance95
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Re: Anyone else going to practice Saturday morning?
Agree with the bolded, although I read the NYT rather than do practice Q's. By test day you should have the confidence that you will rocks the questions.rinkrat19 wrote:I got to my test center early (hour drive) and did some LR in the car, to wake up and transition from "driving" mode to "thinking." I probably did 10-12 questions, not enough to get bored. I don't think it's a good idea to have the first thing you read all morning be test questions that count. Make sure you've already woken up the part of your brain that absorbs information from printed text.
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Re: Anyone else going to practice Saturday morning?
That's an amazing idea, never even thought of that.rinkrat19 wrote:I got to my test center early (hour drive) and did some LR in the car, to wake up and transition from "driving" mode to "thinking." I probably did 10-12 questions, not enough to get bored. I don't think it's a good idea to have the first thing you read all morning be test questions that count. Make sure you've already woken up the part of your brain that absorbs information from printed text.
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Re: Anyone else going to practice Saturday morning?
Hmm, I'd never put it in exactly those terms, but yes, I almost invariably read something before I go to take a standardized test. (Which is something I do a lot, as a test prep teacher.)
There are two sides to this: the people who need to activate their brains before they start work, and the people who are so exhausted by the time they finish that they need to conserve all the energy that they've got. Make sure that you're the former, not the latter. If you think that endurance might be a factor, then go easy and don't do anything before the test (remember that there's an experimental section early on); if not, do some warming up of some kind.
My usual advice is to do something that you've done before (a while ago), so that there are no terrible surprises. How awful would it be to do the first five questions from an LR section that you thought were going to be easy but get two or three of them wrong? It would blow your confidence right before the test, and since you can't check your answers after each section, you'll just get more and more nervous as you go. So do something you've done before and know is easy, in order to have absolutely no surprises. Could be games, could be RC, could be LR — whatever you think you need to warm up the most. (Could be your worst section — in order to get into the right mode — or your best section — in order to stretch those thinking muscles.)
There are two sides to this: the people who need to activate their brains before they start work, and the people who are so exhausted by the time they finish that they need to conserve all the energy that they've got. Make sure that you're the former, not the latter. If you think that endurance might be a factor, then go easy and don't do anything before the test (remember that there's an experimental section early on); if not, do some warming up of some kind.
My usual advice is to do something that you've done before (a while ago), so that there are no terrible surprises. How awful would it be to do the first five questions from an LR section that you thought were going to be easy but get two or three of them wrong? It would blow your confidence right before the test, and since you can't check your answers after each section, you'll just get more and more nervous as you go. So do something you've done before and know is easy, in order to have absolutely no surprises. Could be games, could be RC, could be LR — whatever you think you need to warm up the most. (Could be your worst section — in order to get into the right mode — or your best section — in order to stretch those thinking muscles.)