- Thu Dec 24, 2020 8:25 pm
#82748
Hi, I'm hoping someone could help me understand what would be the most effective way to study for LR based on my performance. Since September, I've done a small handful of timed LR sections, 15 timed LR sections, and 9 timed LSATs. During timed LSATs I had been getting about 1 wrong on one LR section and 5 wrong on another, but now I am consistently getting 5 or more wrong on every LR section.
On each LR section, I get a somewhat narrow range of question types wrong, but across LR sections that turns into a wide range. The list includes flaw, MOR, weaken, strengthen, MBT, Assumption, and Resolve questions, as, as well as questions that use S/N conditions. As far as I can tell, there is no strong pattern in what I'm getting wrong. Sometimes the questions I get wrong are ones that are flagged, but not always. The only patterns I notice are that the questions wrong are usually widely distributed across the 25 questions (though most are in the #15-20 area), and I always feel rushed to finish/generally don't have time. I almost never have time to check flagged answers, and check only 1-2 at most. Oddly, regardless of how rushed I feel, I've recently been getting about 5 wrong every time.
When I check my answers, I often find that I make dumb mistakes-- like I glossed over a key phrase in the stim or answer choice, or preemptively eliminated a right answer because I had already selected a wrong one. Oftentimes I narrow answers to two contenders, so when I check questions I got wrong I immediately know what the right answer should have been. I consistently chalk up most of my errors to these dumb mistakes, in the same way that a riddle only seems hard when you don't know the answer, but seems obvious once you do. I really struggle to understand what that could mean about where I should focus my efforts, if 'dumb mistakes' mean I'm looking at my errors in the wrong way.
Does anyone have suggestions on how I can focus my studies? I'm not sure if I'm best off doing untimed practice sections to make sure I have the fundamentals down, or if better off drilling the range of question types I'm getting wrong, or maybe I should just do more timed practice sections because my fundamentals are good but my timing is bad. I'd appreciate any advice.
On each LR section, I get a somewhat narrow range of question types wrong, but across LR sections that turns into a wide range. The list includes flaw, MOR, weaken, strengthen, MBT, Assumption, and Resolve questions, as, as well as questions that use S/N conditions. As far as I can tell, there is no strong pattern in what I'm getting wrong. Sometimes the questions I get wrong are ones that are flagged, but not always. The only patterns I notice are that the questions wrong are usually widely distributed across the 25 questions (though most are in the #15-20 area), and I always feel rushed to finish/generally don't have time. I almost never have time to check flagged answers, and check only 1-2 at most. Oddly, regardless of how rushed I feel, I've recently been getting about 5 wrong every time.
When I check my answers, I often find that I make dumb mistakes-- like I glossed over a key phrase in the stim or answer choice, or preemptively eliminated a right answer because I had already selected a wrong one. Oftentimes I narrow answers to two contenders, so when I check questions I got wrong I immediately know what the right answer should have been. I consistently chalk up most of my errors to these dumb mistakes, in the same way that a riddle only seems hard when you don't know the answer, but seems obvious once you do. I really struggle to understand what that could mean about where I should focus my efforts, if 'dumb mistakes' mean I'm looking at my errors in the wrong way.
Does anyone have suggestions on how I can focus my studies? I'm not sure if I'm best off doing untimed practice sections to make sure I have the fundamentals down, or if better off drilling the range of question types I'm getting wrong, or maybe I should just do more timed practice sections because my fundamentals are good but my timing is bad. I'd appreciate any advice.