- Thu Sep 10, 2020 7:28 pm
#78904
Hi Powerscore,
I began studying for the LSAT in late May with the Princeton Review's 165+ course. My diagnostic was a 137 and my highest score so far has been a 157 (although my average is a 153) and my target score is a 165. The prep course ended in July so since then, I'd been studying on average 5-8 hours a day/ 6 times a week. I wrote the August LSAT-flex on the 31st and I'm not too confident about my score so I am planning on retaking the test. I am registered to write the October LSAT-flex (which would give me a little over 3 weeks to prep), but I am strongly considering withdrawing and taking the November LSAT to give me more time for preparation. RC is currently my worst section. I struggle with the "prepare" step (so reading the passage and understanding the structure, tone and purpose of the passage) and the inference and reasoning questions. I usually take 5-6 mins and it takes at least 10 minutes to get through the questions, so I only end up getting through 2-2.5 passages. I know that I will need to review my strategy for reading comp (especially when it comes to speed- I have the accuracy but I am aiming for at least 3 passages), and I'm not sure if that is something that can be accomplished in 3 weeks. For Arguments, I am usually attempting 15-18 questions per section and my accuracy ranges from -2 to -4. I am really good at determining the question type, but I struggle a lot with understanding the stimulus (mentally separating the premises from the conclusion and understanding what's wrong with the argument and what I need to do to fix it) and pacing. Sometimes, I find myself reading the stimulus 2-3 times or reading it once or twice and looking through the answer choices and then going back and reading again, which wastes way too much time. My best section is logic games. My accuracy ranges from -2 to -6 depending on whether I make it to the final game. I started using the Logical Reasoning Bible about a week and a half before the August test and I found it very useful so I plan on using that to review for arguments. But, I know that for arguments and reading comp there are a lot of basic skills that I need to improve on before I can see significant improvement. Taking all that into account, I wanted to know if you all think it's feasible for me to get a 165 if I write in October (I just started school so I know that my course load won't be as rigorous, and I'd be working at least 8 hours a week, which would give me a lot of time to study) or if it would be smarter to write in November (I am applying to Canadian law schools so applications are due November 1st, and then school work usually picks up around then so I don't want to burn myself out - although starting now would ensure that I could spread things out). I know I'd be more prepared if I wrote in November, but it's annoying because I already registered for the October test and the refund's only 50usd, so re-registering for November would mean that I'd be wasting a lot of money. Also, if anyone has any advice on what I can do to improve specifically on reading comp (or any names of RC tutors) that'd be very much appreciated:)) I've heard that I should highlight or take notes, but I find highlighting structural words and things I see in the question stems to be really helpful.
Sorry that this is so long and for adding all of these details by the way, I just thought it'd help to better understand my situation.
Thank you!
I began studying for the LSAT in late May with the Princeton Review's 165+ course. My diagnostic was a 137 and my highest score so far has been a 157 (although my average is a 153) and my target score is a 165. The prep course ended in July so since then, I'd been studying on average 5-8 hours a day/ 6 times a week. I wrote the August LSAT-flex on the 31st and I'm not too confident about my score so I am planning on retaking the test. I am registered to write the October LSAT-flex (which would give me a little over 3 weeks to prep), but I am strongly considering withdrawing and taking the November LSAT to give me more time for preparation. RC is currently my worst section. I struggle with the "prepare" step (so reading the passage and understanding the structure, tone and purpose of the passage) and the inference and reasoning questions. I usually take 5-6 mins and it takes at least 10 minutes to get through the questions, so I only end up getting through 2-2.5 passages. I know that I will need to review my strategy for reading comp (especially when it comes to speed- I have the accuracy but I am aiming for at least 3 passages), and I'm not sure if that is something that can be accomplished in 3 weeks. For Arguments, I am usually attempting 15-18 questions per section and my accuracy ranges from -2 to -4. I am really good at determining the question type, but I struggle a lot with understanding the stimulus (mentally separating the premises from the conclusion and understanding what's wrong with the argument and what I need to do to fix it) and pacing. Sometimes, I find myself reading the stimulus 2-3 times or reading it once or twice and looking through the answer choices and then going back and reading again, which wastes way too much time. My best section is logic games. My accuracy ranges from -2 to -6 depending on whether I make it to the final game. I started using the Logical Reasoning Bible about a week and a half before the August test and I found it very useful so I plan on using that to review for arguments. But, I know that for arguments and reading comp there are a lot of basic skills that I need to improve on before I can see significant improvement. Taking all that into account, I wanted to know if you all think it's feasible for me to get a 165 if I write in October (I just started school so I know that my course load won't be as rigorous, and I'd be working at least 8 hours a week, which would give me a lot of time to study) or if it would be smarter to write in November (I am applying to Canadian law schools so applications are due November 1st, and then school work usually picks up around then so I don't want to burn myself out - although starting now would ensure that I could spread things out). I know I'd be more prepared if I wrote in November, but it's annoying because I already registered for the October test and the refund's only 50usd, so re-registering for November would mean that I'd be wasting a lot of money. Also, if anyone has any advice on what I can do to improve specifically on reading comp (or any names of RC tutors) that'd be very much appreciated:)) I've heard that I should highlight or take notes, but I find highlighting structural words and things I see in the question stems to be really helpful.
Sorry that this is so long and for adding all of these details by the way, I just thought it'd help to better understand my situation.
Thank you!