155 Dec 14. 161 Oct 15.
I was PTing on average 167 for this cycle...I knew RC got me when I took it (-8), from just the last passage, and I missed a few on LG just because of game 3 (-3 overall). LR shook me though, I was so confident through it and I ended up with -14 overall when I was expecting maybe -8. I don't know. I was saying, maybe I got a 165. NOPE. 161. SO here I am...I don't think Dec would do me justice so I'm thinking Feb is the last shot. I've gone through a ton of material already, so I'm at a loss.
February Study Timeline Forum
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- Posts: 1
- Joined: Fri Jan 01, 2016 5:38 pm
Re: February Study Timeline
This response might be too late to do you much good, but might I suggest delaying your admission a year? Applying with the February LSAT would be too late for a lot of schools, since by the time you get your score back several of their deadlines will have passed. Delaying would allow you an opportunity to significantly improve your score, which as you should know is largely unparalleled in the boost it'll give your admission prospects.
As for having already gone through a lot of material, in my opinion, as long as you have at least a few fresh PT's on hand then I think that's enough material to study for retake, assuming that you're already ahead on the learning curve due to your previous studies. Keep in mind that there's nothing wrong with redoing PT's that you've already done. Your score on those PT's will likely not be accurately representative of what you're actual score would be, for obvious reasons, but you will still improve from reapplying the strategies you've learned and gaining further familiarity with the different question types.
Best of luck.
As for having already gone through a lot of material, in my opinion, as long as you have at least a few fresh PT's on hand then I think that's enough material to study for retake, assuming that you're already ahead on the learning curve due to your previous studies. Keep in mind that there's nothing wrong with redoing PT's that you've already done. Your score on those PT's will likely not be accurately representative of what you're actual score would be, for obvious reasons, but you will still improve from reapplying the strategies you've learned and gaining further familiarity with the different question types.
Best of luck.