- Mon Jul 30, 2018 10:50 am
#48957
I'm planning on taking the September LSAT and have been studying for about 2 months now! I've gone through the Bibles twice, spent about a month just drilling and have began to work on full timed PT's and deep review. My diagnostic was a 149 and my highest PT was a 156, but I'm feeling very frustrated lately because my PT scores have been all over the place and seem to only be getting worse despite my review getting better (or so I thought). My most recent PT was a 151 and I am definitely feeling discouraged after that. It seems like when I do review (mainly LR), it isn't clicking in my brain on how to not make the same mistakes again. I'm not finding one specific question type that I always get wrong which doesn't help either. When I go through a section after reviewing a PT, I feel pretty confident in most of my answers yet I still get many wrong. I've been doing the blind review method which I thought would help but I go into a fresh PT making mistakes again. I really feel stuck and I feel like I'm not learning how to improve/ missing something important! All the advice I've read on how to improve your score highlights going through PT after PT to improve familiarity, but I feel like it is counterproductive for me to go through PT's if my score isn't improving. It seems like I just continue to practice the same (wrong?) way to answer the questions. I'm hitting a serious wall and the only thing keeping me from giving up is how bad I want to get into my #1.
A few other things:
When I first began studying, LG was one of my strongest where I would only get MAX -3. This has gotten worse and I feel like I've forgotten how to approach this section since LG was the first Bible I read. Should I focus more on this to see more improvements? Timing is a challenge for me on LG but when untimed, I can score high.
For RC, I tend to miss an entire passage because I read detail for detail. I was reading on this blog and ran into someone who got the advice of David Killoran about reading less for detail. This approach doesn't make much sense to me because I feel like if I don't read for detail, I won't know the answers. Does anyone have good advice on this?
And again, will continuing to do PT's without improving really help? I feel like I'm going to waste fresh PT's if I continue doing them with the wrong approach.
I now realize why they say not to underestimate the LSAT!
A few other things:
When I first began studying, LG was one of my strongest where I would only get MAX -3. This has gotten worse and I feel like I've forgotten how to approach this section since LG was the first Bible I read. Should I focus more on this to see more improvements? Timing is a challenge for me on LG but when untimed, I can score high.
For RC, I tend to miss an entire passage because I read detail for detail. I was reading on this blog and ran into someone who got the advice of David Killoran about reading less for detail. This approach doesn't make much sense to me because I feel like if I don't read for detail, I won't know the answers. Does anyone have good advice on this?
And again, will continuing to do PT's without improving really help? I feel like I'm going to waste fresh PT's if I continue doing them with the wrong approach.
I now realize why they say not to underestimate the LSAT!