What are everyone's thoughts on one-on-one tutoring (typically with students/graduates who scored extremely high)? Any success stories???
I took the September test (my first attempt), and while I did decent it was below my target and below what I was scoring in practice. I want to make sure I get it the second time around. I've done plenty of self-study and I feel like I have the fundamentals down but I'm still missing some pieces and there's definitely room for improvement.
One-on-one tutoring? Thoughts? Forum
- ws120
- Posts: 26
- Joined: Tue Sep 27, 2016 9:21 am
Re: One-on-one tutoring? Thoughts?
Tutor here... I've worked with several students one-on-one and what I've found is that the most helpful sessions are when students bring in questions from actual tests/sections they have taken. If you're past the fundamentals, its time to start taking and really understanding the practice exams... meaning you have to pin down exactly why answer choices are right and wrong. A one-on-one session can help you with that understanding. Find someone who knows the exam and has a +175 LSAT score if possible.