- Sun Oct 18, 2015 9:56 pm
#20248
Hi Dave,
That's a very long post with a lot of suggestions! I've enjoyed reading every sentence of it, thank you so much!!!
I have previously been a student of Powerscore, and have taken the 3-month long summer LSAT course, and I found the bibles to be extremely helpful in preparing me for the LSAT, especially the LG and LR sections. I pretty much learned how to do the LSAT from them.
- For the LG section, usually I just do the first three games sequentially, without attempting the fourth game. But sometimes I do find the second or third game to be challenging, therefore I just jump directly towards the fourth game and attempt this one instead. It takes around 3-4 minutes for me to diagram the games out. In total it takes me around 9-12 minutes to finish one game. Sometimes I feel that I not very good at making inferences at the beginning. I have done all the games from 1991-2010, however I feel that I am just mechanically doing them, but the speed is not improving, and that I am not learning too much. Usually I like to look at the 7sage LG videos, as I think that they are very helpful in teaching strategies. I think one thing lacking for me might be to categorize, summarize, memorize the games and the reasoning behind each of them. I am a science double major, so usually LG should be the easiest section for me, but it seems that in this case it is not. If there is unlimited time, I think that LG would be the section I would score the highest on, as I will probably be able to do all the games accurately (unless it's a killer or weird game), BUT speed is a very big problem. So because of the time factor, though my accuracy is okay untimed, my LG section timed score is still very low.
- For the RC comprehension section, usually I do the first and second passages for sure, and then choose between the third and fourth passage. But usually I just do first, second and third passages sequentially, because I feel that the fourth passage is harder than the third comparison passage. I usually take around 3-4 minutes reading each passage and annotating it, but I spend way too much time doing the questions and I always need to refer back to the passage. I need to make annotations throughout reading the passage, otherwise I can't follow up reading and understanding the passage. I usually circle the keywords and underline other stuff with a pencil. While reading I do try to think about the main point, author's perspective etc.. but then i forget about this later, because I become too concentrated reading the passage, and feel that thinking about those things would delay my reading speed. As for the topic of the RC, my weakest topic would be something about art, music, or even law. I feel that I just sometimes cannot even understand the passage properly, and I take a lot of time reading it (~4 mins) and answering the questions. I feel that minority/diversity passages about a minority ethnicity author OR science passages are okay. I do not see a huge disadvantage or advantage doing a comparison passage vs. single passage. Usually the score is around the same. My average time for each passage is around 10-12 minutes.
- For the LR, I basically have no specific strong or weak point for a type of question. My mistakes are quite spread out. But usually I can get the Main point questions correct. I can usually finish 20-25 questions within the 35 minute period, and the total score for one LR section is around 15-18, with 15/25 being the average score, and 18/25 being the best score. And after I score myself, and circle the wrong questions I go back to the wrong questions, and try to choose the correct answer. Usually I can get most of them correct, and can increase from 15 /25(original score) to 20ish (after corrections score). While trying to getting the wrong questions correct, I do analyze each answer choice and ask myself why the other choices are wrong. While i do the questions, i usually put a note next to the questions that I am unsure about, and after scoring myself, I return back to these questions even if I have chosen them correctly, and try to understand why this is the correct answer.
Overall, I am a slow test-taker. In college, I always finish the exams at the last minute, BUT usually I can still score very well, because the time given for the exams is generous. I have already graduated from college, and I am working now. I graduated from a top 20 university, with a STEM double major.
Sorry for this extremely long post!! I would love to hear advice from you regarding my LSAT preparation for Dec., but I am just wondering, do you personally do LSAT tutoring? I have read many of your articles and replies to students and found them to be very helpful, so I was just thinking that if you do teach personally, perhaps you could help me better by guiding me through the LSAT preparation for Dec.? I have previously hired tutors to help me with my LSAT, though I don't think that they were very helpful. The tutor that I have hired was a student who has scored above a 178, and is attending a Yale.
Thank you in advance for your time and patience in reading through this post!!! I really really appreciate it!