Emily,
Score variations happen, so it's not true that, just because your latest test scores are lower than earlier ones, you are seeing more than an apparent downward trend. Look at what you're doing right in your tests (and if your lowest score in recent PTs is a 155, you're consistently getting more than half the questions right, so you're doing more right than wrong). You want to keep doing right what you've been doing right. One possible reason your scores went down, beyond normal fluctuation, is that you were trying to change too much of what got you the low-160s scores. Of course a 162 is not a 180, but it's a pretty good score, and you could only get that score by doing a lot of things exactly right. In an effort to get higher, did you adjust too much? I definitely advise you to look at those PTs and see what questions you're consistently getting right, and keep up the good work with those. Then look at what you can address in the remaining questions. Radical changes in less than a week are not feasible! So, if I noticed I was getting a lot of Assumption, Parallel Reasoning, and Point at Issue questions wrong, but not much of anything else, I'd probably focus on one of those types - probably Assumption, because it's more common than the others (and Assumption and Parallel are both more common than Point at Issue). Then, moving forward after the June test into August, I'd go over all the questions I seem to have trouble with.
Even though your first PT and latest PT are the same score, you've got a lot higher in between! So don't lose heart because it looks like you made no progress. Find out what you're doing well and what you need to work on, and get back to those low 160s.
Tlarmore16,
You can transfer your answers to the PTs into our scoring system here:
https://studentcenter.powerscore.com/se ... ts-section (scroll down to "Score your practice tests using our LSAT Test Scoring System.").
Feel free to comment directly on this forum post with any further information or questions you have.
Robert Carroll