- Mon Apr 22, 2019 4:22 pm
#64327
6 weeks is plenty of time to make a lot of progress! Just focus on one step at a time, dealing with what is right in front of you. Following a blind review, when you go through and check the answers you will find that the questions fall into two categories:
1. You got them right both times, first during the timed test and again on review. The only thing to think about there is whether you struggled on any of them or took particularly long to answer them. If so, study those to see how you can be more efficient. Look for patterns in what slowed you down.
2. Wrong on the test, right on review. Congratulations! You taught yourself something valuable! Pay attention to why you got it wrong the first time so you can better understand how to get it right the next time.
3. Wrong both times. Study these especially to find patterns and figure out where you went wrong, so you can focus your studies on learning the right strategies and techniques for those question types. Did you prephrase? Identify the conclusion in the argument? Did you read every word, including in all five answers?
4. Right under timed conditions but wrong on review. Hopefully you won't have many of those! If you have any, try to figure out why you talked yourself out of a good answer and into a bad one. Are you bringing in outside info and your own assumptions? Are you letting self-doubt infect your decision making? You should never change an answer choice without a clear, articulated explanation for why you are doing it, so ask yourself what your rationale was and try to figure out where that rationale went wrong.
Don't think about July, or how long you have been or will be studying. Just focus on the task at hand - get better than you were a week ago, one step at a time. That will keep adding up until you find yourself where you want to be, whenever that happens to be. June is still a reasonable goal, if you just keep doing the work. And remember to give yourself a break now and then! Go see a movie, go out for a drink or three, take a nap! Some days you just have to rest and recover, and that is part of the process too. Anything else is unhealthy and counterproductive.
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at
https://twitter.com/LSATadam