- Sun Feb 17, 2013 12:26 pm
#7788
Hey PowerScore team,
You guys have been great! I've taken a full PowerScore course, and have used both the PowerScore LG Bible and Workbook and all have been fantastic. But now, I need some other kind of help...I wrote my first LSAT yesterday, and unfortunately I was the victim of excess hydration . In other words, my nerves got the best of me and I had to leave during the test to attend the bathroom right at the beginning of section 1. Before going I was entirely distracted and with zero focus. I couldn't make sense of anything in 1/3 LR section which destroyed my confidence if not score right from the very beginning. Even on question 1 it felt like the words were dancing around on the page with no connection or correlation with each other. I don't know if this was because of my need to go to the bathroom or other factors, needless to say I will be cancelling.
In the month leading to the exam is when I really made the discovery that I wasn't used to the time pressure (I was basically working without the use of a timer or watch). I took a practice test and couldn't even finish it because I felt so discouraged question after question feeling wrong. Once I was honest with myself with where I was I really buckled down and started pushing myself. In the week before the LSAT is when I really realized I'm not where I need to be with LG. So I bought the Bible and Workbook and put myself through a few intensive days. After all of that I took my first two full practice tests timed 2-3 days before the LSAT and got 168 on both. A big jump from the 140's in my diagnostic where getting through even one game took me practically the whole 35 minutes.
My point is, I think I've gotten the fundamentals. I know my next step is building stamina and more familiarity with problem LR and LG questions. I've had LSAT successes but they've been haphazard and inconsistent, wildly varying on my moods and level of concentration. What I don't know is what I should do now. I will be applying to law schools for the next term (not September 2013) and I have a looot of course work to catch up on (not to mention work and summer school) so June LSAT isn't a priority. But I don't have any experience with any LSAT studying other than intensive bootcamp style, which isn't what I can keep up till my next LSAT session. So, I need some help with how to proceed. I don't want my efforts to go to waste . Can you guys give me some advice please?
Some tips/experiences I need to remember:
-In the regular week, I was used to waking up about 10am and practicing from then. I was to be at my test center at 8:30am so I'm guessing my test began between 9-10. In any case I woke up at 6:15am with 7 hours of sleep which was, LSAT-routine wise, atypical. I should tailor my LSAT studying according to my test time
-Drink MUCH less of ANYTHING before the test. When I'm nervous I feel like going to the bathroom, which is why I can't load up on water/juice beforehand
You guys have been great! I've taken a full PowerScore course, and have used both the PowerScore LG Bible and Workbook and all have been fantastic. But now, I need some other kind of help...I wrote my first LSAT yesterday, and unfortunately I was the victim of excess hydration . In other words, my nerves got the best of me and I had to leave during the test to attend the bathroom right at the beginning of section 1. Before going I was entirely distracted and with zero focus. I couldn't make sense of anything in 1/3 LR section which destroyed my confidence if not score right from the very beginning. Even on question 1 it felt like the words were dancing around on the page with no connection or correlation with each other. I don't know if this was because of my need to go to the bathroom or other factors, needless to say I will be cancelling.
In the month leading to the exam is when I really made the discovery that I wasn't used to the time pressure (I was basically working without the use of a timer or watch). I took a practice test and couldn't even finish it because I felt so discouraged question after question feeling wrong. Once I was honest with myself with where I was I really buckled down and started pushing myself. In the week before the LSAT is when I really realized I'm not where I need to be with LG. So I bought the Bible and Workbook and put myself through a few intensive days. After all of that I took my first two full practice tests timed 2-3 days before the LSAT and got 168 on both. A big jump from the 140's in my diagnostic where getting through even one game took me practically the whole 35 minutes.
My point is, I think I've gotten the fundamentals. I know my next step is building stamina and more familiarity with problem LR and LG questions. I've had LSAT successes but they've been haphazard and inconsistent, wildly varying on my moods and level of concentration. What I don't know is what I should do now. I will be applying to law schools for the next term (not September 2013) and I have a looot of course work to catch up on (not to mention work and summer school) so June LSAT isn't a priority. But I don't have any experience with any LSAT studying other than intensive bootcamp style, which isn't what I can keep up till my next LSAT session. So, I need some help with how to proceed. I don't want my efforts to go to waste . Can you guys give me some advice please?
Some tips/experiences I need to remember:
-In the regular week, I was used to waking up about 10am and practicing from then. I was to be at my test center at 8:30am so I'm guessing my test began between 9-10. In any case I woke up at 6:15am with 7 hours of sleep which was, LSAT-routine wise, atypical. I should tailor my LSAT studying according to my test time
-Drink MUCH less of ANYTHING before the test. When I'm nervous I feel like going to the bathroom, which is why I can't load up on water/juice beforehand