What will distress me more in the next twelve hrs? My LSAT score or tonightās episode of Ahsoka? We shall see.
(I am live reacting in the comments of this post, ignore)
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What will distress me more in the next twelve hrs? My LSAT score or tonightās episode of Ahsoka? We shall see.
(I am live reacting in the comments of this post, ignore)
GUYS THE LSAT SCORES JUST RELEASED
Iām scared to check ahhh
LSAC taking free LSAT prep off Khan Academy and forcing us to either pay for Law Hub premium or not have access to classes anymore should be punishable by public humiliation until they are destroyed. the fact that they have enough of a monopoly to do this is such an absolute crime.
My lsat score is on a temporary hold⦠so I didn't get my results back in test score release day (today) and I get them in two weeks!⦠this may sound silly but omg please!! to whatever god/thing you believe in, please PRAY/MANIFEST its a good score. If you believe in the flying Dorito god then so be it.
So I just took the LSAT today and to be completely honest⦠wasnāt as bad as I thought itād be. Somehow finished every section with time leftover to doublecheck my work! Feeling pretty good about it š„° even though I pulled an all-nighter before it and still havenāt slept⦠š«
Not intentionally, mind youāLSACās new online LSAT Proctor software isnāt compatible with the new MacOS Sonoma 14.0⦠so spent all night trying to learn how to downgrade my MacOS version in order to download the testing/proctoring software before my 7am exam.
Turns out, on silicon-chip Macs (M1+), you canāt just simply downgrade or restart/reboot your laptop to the software it originally came in. Thatās apparently only an available option on Intel Macs.
Instead, if you have a silicon Mac, you have to go through the complicated process of:
1. Backing up your Mac using Time Machine on some other external hard drive or disk (since downgrading completely wipes your startup disk and erases all data)
2. Setting up a Bootable Installerāalso on an external hard drive (separate)
3. Downloading the version software from Appleās App Store (the easiest part of the entire process! Though, of course, you canāt even run it until youāve done everything else first)
4. Using the Terminal app and running the specific (in my case, Ventura) command as found on Appleās website and proceeding with the rest of the commands to get it working.
which⦠donāt get me started on figuring out how to set up a Bootable Installer. This was all completely foreign to me and honestly I was two āerrorā messages away from a complete mental breakdown.
At 5am, I gave up and woke up my poor friend to beg her to let me use her laptop for my LSAT.
If anyone can send me a crash course on using the Macbookās Terminal app, it would be more than welcomed!
At this point, I gotta set up a Bootable Installer just for the spite of it. Never letting myself get blindsided like this again! Will always have a backup version. Learned my lesson lol
So, I just took the LSAT and got a 171. I had less than 3 months to study because I had to undergo surgery, so I had to prepare concise notes which I used to review questions I was getting consistently wrong.
I thought I'd share my notes for free in the hopes that it helps others:
Need some help with studying for the LSAT? Click here for free notes that you can use for revision purposes.
I am not done uploading everything- I'm currently working on my application. But I'm uploading on a regular basis. And do not hesitate to reach out if you have any questions.
And good luck with your studies!!
Speed vs. Accuracy
You have 35 minutes and a crap load of questions. So, what are you gonna do?
Itās tempting to just say,Ā āOkay, how many questions can I possibly get through before time is up?ā
Itās not a stupid idea by any means: youāre thinkinā, I canāt possibly get these right if I donāt attempt the question.
But hereās the problem - you stretch yourself so thin that you donāt get the questions you probably could have.
You need to slow down and remember that every question gives you enough information to find the correct answer. If youāre only answering 18-20 questions per section but youāre answering them correctly, youāre looking at a score in the mid-160s.Ā
So hereās what you do: completely ignore the timer. I mean it - donāt speed up or slow down, just go at a pace where you know youāre answering each question you attempt correctly. When you get to the five minute warning, bubble in all the remaining answer choices the same letter (thatās just to save time - it doesnāt matter at all what letter you pick). After that, go back where you left off and answer a couple more questions if you can.Ā
Remember, the questions in each section tend to get harder as you go. But you get the exact same amount of credit (one point) for each question, whether itās number one or number 25. Youāll do better overall if you extend the effort on earlier, easier questions that you know youāll get right, and then any of the last handful of questions are just icing on the cake.
You have to approach the test this way because youāll never make progress if youāre not striving for comprehension above all else. The speed will come as you continue practicing and studying, donāt worry. Isnāt that how everything goes?Ā
Remember the last skill you learned (and remember, the LSAT is a skills test). Maybe it was cooking or knitting or whatever. You were slow at first, right? But if you focus on doing it right, you will eventually get faster just by practice.
If youāre shooting for a score in the 170s, this still applies, but youāll have to practice to the point where youāre consistently getting to at least the last two or three questions. Donāt forget, though, that you can miss up to 14 questions and still score a 170 on many tests! That means you could randomly guess on the last 3-4 questions on every section and still score in that upper echelon.Ā
So, when it comes to speed vs. accuracy, pick accuracy every time.
Finally back after my long hiatus. I took the LSAT and did well, but Iām going back for another try to get into my goal school. Working in healthcare means I canāt self-quarantine, so thankfully I can get some studying done now! Testing a new book too!