- Fri Sep 14, 2012 4:25 pm
#5362
So for LR, I sometimes do prephrase, because I often know right away what I'm looking for, but I feel that to take 15 seconds to think about what the answer is going to be when off the bat I have no clue can eat up crucial timing. You think I should prephrase even when I don't have a clue where it's going? With 3.5 weeks until the test, I should experiment with a new method? Though, more often than not, my LR mistakes are stupid mistakes because I missed a little wording or because I just feel for a trick that is uncharacteristic of me.
When it comes to RC, lately, I get the MP questions right. It's rare that I get it wrong, even though I don't really prephrase. I think I do prephrase subconsciously because I read the passages with a better flow now, and reading with the flow, I know what's going on, and I end up recognizing the MP right away when I read the choices. And for the tone, I also usually get it right because I could cancel out a bunch of the choices right away, and also for those questions the words I would use to describe the tone usually won't be the ones the LSAT uses.
When I bombed an LSAT yesterday (163), I messed up on a few respects. On LR, I was tired and didn't have complete focus. I got an 89% question wrong because I misread it and answered something that it wasn't asking. I got 8 wrong in the two sections, which is my worst in a LONG time. In LG, I got 4 wrong, and got 5/6 on the dinosaur game, but I think I psyched myself out a little bit knowing that game was coming and my timing overall wasn't too good. From what I could see, the dinosaur game is overratedly difficult. In RC, I got 9 wrong, and shot myself in the foot on the second game when I was moving at a good pace, and on one of the last questions in that game, I second guessed the answer that I had gotten in under 30 secs for two mins, which really through me off. I knew I had 8:45 for each of the last two passages, but it would be 15 questions, so I was cutting it close on time. And then to top it off, the third passage was CC, and it was a hard humanities, which is my RC weakness at the moment, so it got under my skin, I couldn't focus on the reading, and got 5/8 wrong. So I know where I messed up in each section, and my plan now is to take another test on Sunday, and take what I learned to get back on track with that test.
Do you have any tips of how to go about reading dense humanities passages? I tend to have issues getting through them, which messes me over on the questions. I feel like they flow worse than every other type of passage...
Thanks!
PS - Breakdown on this test:
80/101
LR: 43/51 (4 wrong in each)
RC: 18/27
LG: 19/23
Exp. LR: 23/26 (one of the ones I got wrong was the third question - very uncharacteristic of me, and sorta careless.)
And I consider a 163 to be bombing the test because I got a 167 last week and a 165 the week before.
All advice is appreciated. Thanks!