u/Funny_Resort_9314

▲ 3 r/LSAT

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.

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u/Funny_Resort_9314 — 1 day ago
▲ 24 r/LSAT

This subreddit has been inundated with what I would consider to be incredibly stupid diagnostic questions that can be easily resolved via Google or the other 500 posts regarding this topic. Personally, I feel it's clogging up the subreddit and should also serve as a good litmus test that anyone who is actually considering law school should be able to deduce this very simple answer by themselves. Was just wondering with this post if mods plan on making any changes to ban or at least limit these types of posts.

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u/Funny_Resort_9314 — 19 days ago

Hi everyone, I plan on attending the CU Boulder Law School (which is on the South Side of campus, if that matters), and I was wondering how feasible it is to find good parking or if it would be better to invest in a bus pass? I am planning to live off campus for financial reasons

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u/Funny_Resort_9314 — 24 days ago