- Wed Oct 25, 2023 4:45 pm
#103791
Hi Eric,
While taking complete sections (and even complete LSATs) is definitely something that you should include in your LSAT preparation, these activities should generally occur later in your studies. In other words, when taking a full section or full LSAT, you are basically testing everything at once (each type of LG, RC, LR question, etc.). If you haven't studied and practiced each of these concepts individually first, it can be a little overwhelming and not as useful.
(To be clear, it can be helpful to take one full practice test right at the beginning of your LSAT studying just to get a good sense of the overall test, the timing element, and what's in the different sections, although don't worry too much about your actual score.)
In general, the best approach for studying is to tackle one concept at a time and practice/master that concept before proceeding. For example, if you are using "The Logical Reasoning Bible," take it chapter by chapter, question type by question type. Only once you have covered most of that material should you be taking full LR sections. Doing an LR section before you've studied most of the LR concepts isn't really that helpful.
Also, be aware that speed is something that comes later, once you've studied/practiced all of the concepts, so timing yourself too soon can cause some students to rush and sacrifice understanding/accuracy, which would be a mistake.