Looking specifically for tips/test taking strategies to potentially implement to prevent preventable mistakes.
Hey everyone! I am currently scheduled to take the June LSAT after a mediocre performance in April (164) and have been scoring consistently at 168/169 (timed) in preparation. I have noticed that my biggest issue in breaking into the 170s is that while there may be at most around ~1/2 LR questions and ~1/2 RC questions (around ~2/3 questions in total for the full test) that I get wrong due to incorrect logic/things that I can improve upon with practice, I seemingly struggle with questions that I should be getting right but will get wrong either due to missing a part of the stimulus (missing an important quantifier/etc) or misreading a part of a passage or question stem.
My question is does anyone have techniques that have worked for them? For June preparation I started using a new strategy where I answer questions correctly instead of flagging them unless there is a conceptually misunderstanding (which is usually 2/3 questions at most) and it has seemingly worked well and has lowered the amount of misunderstanding questions I get wrong. However I am considering implementing a 1-2 strategy where I re-read prompts if I am unsure about a question or something among those lines. I am slightly stressed because I want to make sure I get at least a 167 on June and avoiding preventable mistakes would be the best way to that. Thanks for reading and any help.