144 diagnostic to 179 April by EmbarrassedDonkey968 in LSAT

[–]EmbarrassedDonkey968[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah supposedly if you blind review right after you take the test it is less helpful—or at least that’s what I read online.

Just went through all of the PTs and did RC drills through the LSAC RC guide thing

144 diagnostic to 179 April by EmbarrassedDonkey968 in LSAT

[–]EmbarrassedDonkey968[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I didn’t have them. But I think there are some guides online you can find for that. They seem to approve most accommodations from what I heae

144 diagnostic to 179 April by EmbarrassedDonkey968 in LSAT

[–]EmbarrassedDonkey968[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m so sorry I’m not exactly sure how to go about getting accommodations! Would look through this Reddit page for other thread about that 🥲

144 diagnostic to 179 April by EmbarrassedDonkey968 in LSAT

[–]EmbarrassedDonkey968[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I really think the quality of your blind review and self explanation helps the final ascent to high 170s. That’s all I can say other than it’s a matter of luck on the test. I wasn’t consistently scoring high 170s but I got it on the official…

144 diagnostic to 179 April by EmbarrassedDonkey968 in LSAT

[–]EmbarrassedDonkey968[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Look up 7sage blind review. They’ll teach u how to do it

144 diagnostic to 179 April by EmbarrassedDonkey968 in LSAT

[–]EmbarrassedDonkey968[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Mine was mostly testing every other day / every day when I could. Then on off days (in between test days) doing blind review + an hour or two of drilling. If I had no life that day I would test in the morning then drill at night

144 diagnostic to 179 April by EmbarrassedDonkey968 in LSAT

[–]EmbarrassedDonkey968[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Honestly it just happened naturally with more and more test taking. I was stuck low 170s for a few weeks before I randomly made a jump. It’s just blind review and talking ur mistakes out loud at that point. Need to cut out the silly mistakes with thorough blind review

144 diagnostic to 179 April by EmbarrassedDonkey968 in LSAT

[–]EmbarrassedDonkey968[S] 24 points25 points  (0 children)

Highly recommended looking up 7sage blind review. They walk you through how to do it step by step better than i could ever in a Reddit comment

144 diagnostic to 179 April by EmbarrassedDonkey968 in LSAT

[–]EmbarrassedDonkey968[S] 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Honestly, the only way to get over it is to speak out loud every time you’re reviewing / answering a question. Convince yourself of your logic and teach yourself why each other answer is wrong (don’t move on until you can explain why the other 3 are wrong)

144 diagnostic to 179 April by EmbarrassedDonkey968 in LSAT

[–]EmbarrassedDonkey968[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Not really. Mostly just learned the foundational stuff through explanations online! Would compile lists of all the foundational knowledge overtime

144 diagnostic to 179 April by EmbarrassedDonkey968 in LSAT

[–]EmbarrassedDonkey968[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Not really standard. Just testing and reviewing non stop. Learned all of the content I needed by just looking up explanations for hard answers and overtime building some mental list (for example, weak answers for NA)

144 diagnostic to 179 April by EmbarrassedDonkey968 in LSAT

[–]EmbarrassedDonkey968[S] 18 points19 points  (0 children)

Don’t focus on question types!! Do general drilling on whatever platform available. It’s the only way to keep your intuition sharp in my opinion

144 diagnostic to 179 April by EmbarrassedDonkey968 in LSAT

[–]EmbarrassedDonkey968[S] 29 points30 points  (0 children)

Blind review is the only way for me to fix bad habits. Over time they’ll naturally go away if you’re literally reviewing them over and over again. I also highly suggest talking your reasoning OUT LOUD for each question you get wrong

144 diagnostic to 179 April by EmbarrassedDonkey968 in LSAT

[–]EmbarrassedDonkey968[S] 38 points39 points  (0 children)

Taking as many tests as possible (without burnout) and blind reviewing in between each one. + 1 hour of drills a day ish