- Mon Apr 30, 2018 11:57 pm
#45339
Hello,
I've been prepping for the June 2018 LSAT since December. I feel like I have a good grasp of how to answer each question from all the Bibles/Lessons, but I always crack under time pressure.
Untimed, I can always hit at least 160 (my goal), but consistently fall in the low to mid 150s under timed conditions.
I know I should be working with a timer or watch. However, when I do, I get so distracted when I think about how far I should be at a certain time and it messes me up. I get pressured and all the words become fuzzy! I have to reread the stimulus 3x before I get back "in the zone." So, I've just been relying on my internal body clock (is that bad )
I do have some rules of thumb and goals for myself. But they're pretty general.
For the LR section, I aim to answer at least 20 correctly:
- Carefully answer the first 10-15 and get them all right (this takes me about 20 minutes I think)
- After the first 15, I allow myself 3 skips for harder questions
- Finish until at least question 22/ 23
- Last 5 minutes I go back to those I've skipped, or attempt 1-2 short questions I haven't done
LG:
- 3 games correctly
- last 5 minutes, 2 questions for the last game and then guess
RC:
- 3 passages
I'm on my last month of prep and figured that the solution is just to get better overall (as suggested in the lessons).
Currently, I'm slowly reviewing my past practice tests question per question, identifying any problem areas, and drilling myself on question types/ game types etc. that I need work on until I do better on them.
I don't think I'll attempt another timed practice test until I finish reviewing all my past practice tests/ figure out how I can work on my timing properly.
This is my general plan for the rest of the month:
Week 1 (week of May 1)
- Review all practice tests/ drilling on problem areas
Week 2
- 2 Untimed practice tests
- Thorough review of both
- More drilling on problem areas
Week 3 & Week 4
- 1 timed practice test bi-weekly until test day
- Drilling and reviewing in between
Is my approach problematic? Should I force myself to learn how to use a clock?
Nervous, as June will be my second take and I want to do much better!
Any help would be much appreciated. Thank you so much.
Best,
1800-HELPME
I've been prepping for the June 2018 LSAT since December. I feel like I have a good grasp of how to answer each question from all the Bibles/Lessons, but I always crack under time pressure.
Untimed, I can always hit at least 160 (my goal), but consistently fall in the low to mid 150s under timed conditions.
I know I should be working with a timer or watch. However, when I do, I get so distracted when I think about how far I should be at a certain time and it messes me up. I get pressured and all the words become fuzzy! I have to reread the stimulus 3x before I get back "in the zone." So, I've just been relying on my internal body clock (is that bad )
I do have some rules of thumb and goals for myself. But they're pretty general.
For the LR section, I aim to answer at least 20 correctly:
- Carefully answer the first 10-15 and get them all right (this takes me about 20 minutes I think)
- After the first 15, I allow myself 3 skips for harder questions
- Finish until at least question 22/ 23
- Last 5 minutes I go back to those I've skipped, or attempt 1-2 short questions I haven't done
LG:
- 3 games correctly
- last 5 minutes, 2 questions for the last game and then guess
RC:
- 3 passages
I'm on my last month of prep and figured that the solution is just to get better overall (as suggested in the lessons).
Currently, I'm slowly reviewing my past practice tests question per question, identifying any problem areas, and drilling myself on question types/ game types etc. that I need work on until I do better on them.
I don't think I'll attempt another timed practice test until I finish reviewing all my past practice tests/ figure out how I can work on my timing properly.
This is my general plan for the rest of the month:
Week 1 (week of May 1)
- Review all practice tests/ drilling on problem areas
Week 2
- 2 Untimed practice tests
- Thorough review of both
- More drilling on problem areas
Week 3 & Week 4
- 1 timed practice test bi-weekly until test day
- Drilling and reviewing in between
Is my approach problematic? Should I force myself to learn how to use a clock?
Nervous, as June will be my second take and I want to do much better!
Any help would be much appreciated. Thank you so much.
Best,
1800-HELPME