- Mon Dec 09, 2013 4:28 pm
#13200
Hello PowerScore,
As one of the Dallas/Fort Worth area December test-takers I have been afforded an additional 1-2 weeks (presumably) to continue my prep efforts due to the inclement weather cancellation at my site this past Saturday. I am looking for the best way to optimize that additional time while staying sharp, and putting myself in the best position to max out my score on the rescheduled test date.
To provide some background, I registered for the Full Length PowerScore course for the October test. Starting with a diagnostic of 157, at the conclusion of that course I was scoring in the low 160s (high of 163 timed/177 un-timed, below my target timed goal of low 170s). I am committed to applying for this cycle, so I took the October test, knowing that I would also be taking the December test as well. The October LSAT did not go well, and I decided to cancel my score because I had a strong sense that I did not perform close to my potential.
I knew I needed more prep for December and retook the Full Length PowerScore course to gain a better mastery of the techniques. Working a full-time job, I knew I did not put in enough prep time to max out my first course, and just needed more repetitions to start seeing my score improve. Taking the course a second time things started to click for me. My first few timed tests administered in class went fairly well Test #1: 165 and Test #2: 166, but I kept hitting this plateau of 166 on my other timed practice tests outside of class (scored three in a row). On Test #3 I saw a drop to 163, which was due primarily to pushing/poor pacing techniques/sloppiness. After a lot of section work and review of those tests, I got more comfortable with my pacing and developed a sense of when I should skip a question, etc. and got to a place where I knew I could answer most/all LR questions, and almost all LG and RC questions with accuracy -- skipping an occasional time-consuming question to maximize my efficiency.
On the week leading up to Test #4, I scored my highest of a 172 timed during the Thanksgiving break. That Saturday I followed it up with a 171 on Test #4. The week leading up to the Dec. 7th LSAT, I did some review, and took timed test on Tuesday scoring a 169. Feeling confident with those last three scores, I continued some light review, un-timed section work, and completed the PowerScore Challenge Review on Thursday.
With my test date cancelled, I took another practice test this weekend expecting to score in that same range (high 160s/low 170s) and unfortunately did quite lower than I had anticipated. Scoring a 165 and missing more questions than usual in both LR (-4 & -5; had usually scored -2 or -3) and RC (-7; had usually scored -2 or -3, primarily due to running out of time on the last passage), but scored roughly the same on LG (-1; had been -3,-2,-0 on past 3 timed tests).
After reviewing my recent tests, there does not seem to be a recurring weakness on LR question type (typically miss/skip a few of the more difficult questions, may miss a few easy questions that I shouldn't due to carelessness). So I can't tell if my recent dip in performance is due to burn-out, sloppy test-taking or what? However, I would really like to figure it out so I can make corrections over the course of the next 1-2 weeks..
During my most recent timed test (165), I could sense myself answering the LR questions a bit sloppily and struggled on more LR questions than I usually do in a section (i.e. forgetting techniques, not applying techniques correctly) and confidently picked wrong answer choices on questions I "thought" I had worked correctly -- very frustrating. RC was the final section in the test, and found myself feeling kind of fatigued, and while I "read" each passage I wasn't really attacking the passages and the questions like I had on my past few tests, and it showed in my score. While taking the test I couldn't really figure out why I wasn't VIEWSTAMP-ing, or why I couldn't focus while reading each passage enough to really attack the answers -- I just knew I was struggling on the section more than usual.
Sorry for the verbose response, but I wanted to provide enough context to receive the best possible feedback. I'm sure you guys have seen this type of thing happen to several test-takers in the past. With all of that said, what do you recommend I focus my efforts towards over the course of the next week? What should I be doing to sharpen my skills and regain my focus for the rescheduled test date?
Assuming my rescheduled test is this upcoming Saturday, Dec. 14, I would like to take 1 more full-length timed practice test. If it's rescheduled for Saturday, Dec. 21, then I would look to take 2-3 more practice tests.
Thanks in advance for your help.
-Colin
As one of the Dallas/Fort Worth area December test-takers I have been afforded an additional 1-2 weeks (presumably) to continue my prep efforts due to the inclement weather cancellation at my site this past Saturday. I am looking for the best way to optimize that additional time while staying sharp, and putting myself in the best position to max out my score on the rescheduled test date.
To provide some background, I registered for the Full Length PowerScore course for the October test. Starting with a diagnostic of 157, at the conclusion of that course I was scoring in the low 160s (high of 163 timed/177 un-timed, below my target timed goal of low 170s). I am committed to applying for this cycle, so I took the October test, knowing that I would also be taking the December test as well. The October LSAT did not go well, and I decided to cancel my score because I had a strong sense that I did not perform close to my potential.
I knew I needed more prep for December and retook the Full Length PowerScore course to gain a better mastery of the techniques. Working a full-time job, I knew I did not put in enough prep time to max out my first course, and just needed more repetitions to start seeing my score improve. Taking the course a second time things started to click for me. My first few timed tests administered in class went fairly well Test #1: 165 and Test #2: 166, but I kept hitting this plateau of 166 on my other timed practice tests outside of class (scored three in a row). On Test #3 I saw a drop to 163, which was due primarily to pushing/poor pacing techniques/sloppiness. After a lot of section work and review of those tests, I got more comfortable with my pacing and developed a sense of when I should skip a question, etc. and got to a place where I knew I could answer most/all LR questions, and almost all LG and RC questions with accuracy -- skipping an occasional time-consuming question to maximize my efficiency.
On the week leading up to Test #4, I scored my highest of a 172 timed during the Thanksgiving break. That Saturday I followed it up with a 171 on Test #4. The week leading up to the Dec. 7th LSAT, I did some review, and took timed test on Tuesday scoring a 169. Feeling confident with those last three scores, I continued some light review, un-timed section work, and completed the PowerScore Challenge Review on Thursday.
With my test date cancelled, I took another practice test this weekend expecting to score in that same range (high 160s/low 170s) and unfortunately did quite lower than I had anticipated. Scoring a 165 and missing more questions than usual in both LR (-4 & -5; had usually scored -2 or -3) and RC (-7; had usually scored -2 or -3, primarily due to running out of time on the last passage), but scored roughly the same on LG (-1; had been -3,-2,-0 on past 3 timed tests).
After reviewing my recent tests, there does not seem to be a recurring weakness on LR question type (typically miss/skip a few of the more difficult questions, may miss a few easy questions that I shouldn't due to carelessness). So I can't tell if my recent dip in performance is due to burn-out, sloppy test-taking or what? However, I would really like to figure it out so I can make corrections over the course of the next 1-2 weeks..
During my most recent timed test (165), I could sense myself answering the LR questions a bit sloppily and struggled on more LR questions than I usually do in a section (i.e. forgetting techniques, not applying techniques correctly) and confidently picked wrong answer choices on questions I "thought" I had worked correctly -- very frustrating. RC was the final section in the test, and found myself feeling kind of fatigued, and while I "read" each passage I wasn't really attacking the passages and the questions like I had on my past few tests, and it showed in my score. While taking the test I couldn't really figure out why I wasn't VIEWSTAMP-ing, or why I couldn't focus while reading each passage enough to really attack the answers -- I just knew I was struggling on the section more than usual.
Sorry for the verbose response, but I wanted to provide enough context to receive the best possible feedback. I'm sure you guys have seen this type of thing happen to several test-takers in the past. With all of that said, what do you recommend I focus my efforts towards over the course of the next week? What should I be doing to sharpen my skills and regain my focus for the rescheduled test date?
Assuming my rescheduled test is this upcoming Saturday, Dec. 14, I would like to take 1 more full-length timed practice test. If it's rescheduled for Saturday, Dec. 21, then I would look to take 2-3 more practice tests.
Thanks in advance for your help.
-Colin