awalker71 wrote:Hi Robert,
I actually got the same score as Jessica and did months of self study as well. Like her, I am also extremely concerned about my score and believe that my preparation methods are to blame. I have already used up the LSAT Bibles, type training, and workbooks and I am thinking about enrolling in one of the powerscore prep courses this time around. My concern is if the prep course material will have the exact same questions/material from the type training books or workbooks from which I have already worked on, or if the course contains different questions and content. Also, I know that the self study site has study schedules to assist according to the time we all have before our tests. Will these be of any help if I decide to take a course? Thank you.
Hi A,
Thanks for the message! I think it might be worth your time to call into our office this week and speak to someone directly since it's easier and faster to answer the full scope of your questions in that manner, but I'll do what I can in the meantime to help out
First, let's start with the studying you've done before. It sounds like you've ;put a lot of time in, which is great! Even if your score isn't where it needs to be yet, that tie is a foundation that makes it easier to progress as you move forward. The key for me in your past studies is how well you know what you covered. I wrote about this a bit here:
Retaking the LSAT? What To Do Differently To Raise Your Score. The key points for you would be to look at items #4 and #6. Test yourself just to make sure we know the issues you are having, and then with #6 you want to know that what you studied actually has been fully absorbed.
Second, there is some overlap with the course (because some concepts—like argumentation—are universal) but there are many different questions that are covered, and most importantly, the manner of presentation is different. In this sense, they are very different prep approaches. With the books, it's all on you to see the ideas in action and to implement them,. the course puts that job on us, and you get to see questions analyzed and broken down, and to hear how each concept and technique applies to each question. The difference has been described to me as like reading about driving a car vs actually driving a car.
Last, if you move over to a course, you won't want to stay on the self-study schedule. The approaches are compatible of course, but the course moves through the ideas in a different route, in order to take advantage of the live aspect. It also has its own homework, which is sectioned out according to the lessons. It puts you on a different path entirely.
I hope the above helps. Thanks!