Five Weeks Until February 2016 LSAT - Preparation Feedback
Posted: Thu Dec 31, 2015 9:20 pm
Hey everybody,
I'm taking the February LSAT and would appreciate your feedback on my preparation plans for the next five weeks. A bit of background: I took my first diagnostic in May 2014 (I think I scored a 158?) with the intention of taking it in February 2015. A few projects that I was working on took much more time than I had expected, so I ended up postponing for basically a year. In between, I casually studied by going through the 7Sage lessons but haven't taken an actual prep-test until today (166.) The breakdown was:
-8 on LG (didn't finish)
-5 on LR #1
-3 on LR #2
-3 on RC
As expected, I began to feel the fatigue of doing twenty-five problems in a row that I hadn't encountered in my drilling as I went through the sections. In review (apart from LG), nearly all of my mistakes were from carelessness as opposed to a fundamental misunderstanding of the material.
Not to be "that guy" but in preparation and in theory I'm working towards a 180. If I get a 173+, I'll be happy. If I get between 170-172, I won't be happy but likely wouldn't retake. For anything below that, I'll retake.
I'm a college senior and have the entire J-Term (next five weeks) to study with no other obligations or distractions. Given where I'm at, I feel optimistic about hearing the common refrain that LG is the easiest section to consistently get to -0 at but am wary of using that as an excuse to take it lightly. Keeping all of this in mind, I plan on PT'ing every day/every other day until February 6th and then extensively going over my mistakes. I'll also go through the 7Sage LG lessons over the next three days to get a firmer foundation before I dive in.
Keeping all of this in mind, are there any suggestions that you have for using my time effectively, zoning in on those LG's, and fighting through the fatigue? I think that the former will come through sheer repetition, but if there are any strategies for a relatively fresh PTer that you would recommend, I'd love to hear them.
Thanks so much! I'll probably be posting a lot over the next month, so looking forward to getting out of long-time lurker status.
I'm taking the February LSAT and would appreciate your feedback on my preparation plans for the next five weeks. A bit of background: I took my first diagnostic in May 2014 (I think I scored a 158?) with the intention of taking it in February 2015. A few projects that I was working on took much more time than I had expected, so I ended up postponing for basically a year. In between, I casually studied by going through the 7Sage lessons but haven't taken an actual prep-test until today (166.) The breakdown was:
-8 on LG (didn't finish)
-5 on LR #1
-3 on LR #2
-3 on RC
As expected, I began to feel the fatigue of doing twenty-five problems in a row that I hadn't encountered in my drilling as I went through the sections. In review (apart from LG), nearly all of my mistakes were from carelessness as opposed to a fundamental misunderstanding of the material.
Not to be "that guy" but in preparation and in theory I'm working towards a 180. If I get a 173+, I'll be happy. If I get between 170-172, I won't be happy but likely wouldn't retake. For anything below that, I'll retake.
I'm a college senior and have the entire J-Term (next five weeks) to study with no other obligations or distractions. Given where I'm at, I feel optimistic about hearing the common refrain that LG is the easiest section to consistently get to -0 at but am wary of using that as an excuse to take it lightly. Keeping all of this in mind, I plan on PT'ing every day/every other day until February 6th and then extensively going over my mistakes. I'll also go through the 7Sage LG lessons over the next three days to get a firmer foundation before I dive in.
Keeping all of this in mind, are there any suggestions that you have for using my time effectively, zoning in on those LG's, and fighting through the fatigue? I think that the former will come through sheer repetition, but if there are any strategies for a relatively fresh PTer that you would recommend, I'd love to hear them.
Thanks so much! I'll probably be posting a lot over the next month, so looking forward to getting out of long-time lurker status.