- Tue Jan 09, 2018 11:33 am
#42762
I'm just writing this message, because I'm extremely anxious and worried for my first LSAT exam, which I'm taking this coming Feb. I'm a senior at university, and after graduating I plan on taking a GAP year, so I can hopefully enroll at a law school in fall of 2019. I was supposed to take the LSAT this last September, and even prepared a little bit using your 2 months self-study books, over the summer, but since I did not get enough time over the summer and semester to properly study, I decided to move the exam to Feb. I've spent the past 4 weeks studying using the self-study schedule, and have completed 1 to 2 full-length exams (untimed), but I'm extremely worried that even when I'm not timing my exams, I'm not getting an extremely high score, such as in the 170s. For example, the first untimed exam I took, a week ago, I got a 165, which is okay, but if it was timed, I'm afraid I probably would have done worse. Looking to you for advice, do you think its okay that I'm still pretty slow and not extremely accurate with my exams? Other than following your 2-month study schedule is there anything else I should focus on to try to get my timing faster and accuracy up? I'm afraid that if I don't do well on this exam this time I won't have another viable option to take the exam until September, and that might be too late. I guess my rant's basic point is: is it okay that even though i'm almost 4 to 5 weeks into my "2 months self-study schedule" I'm not well on timed, still fairly slow, and not getting extremely high scores? Is it possible for me to get a competitive score?
Sorry for such a long message,
Thank you for your time
Sorry for such a long message,
Thank you for your time