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December 30, 2011

LSAC Official Guide to Law Schools

LSAT Blog LSAC Official Guide Law SchoolsWant more law school data than you'll ever need?

LSAC's site can be difficult to navigate, but it's full of useful information. One especially useful section is its "Official Guide to Law Schools."

Play around with it. You can calculate your chances at various law schools, and you can also get a great deal of information about every ABA-accredited law school.

Enjoy!
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December 29, 2011

LSAT Diary: Visiting Law School and Watching TV

LSAT Blog Visiting Law School Watching TVRosemary's first LSAT Diary gave some tips on getting started with LSAT studying. In this week's LSAT Diary, Rosemary deals with the distraction of watching TV, finds a study space, and visits her first-choice law school.

Rosemary's 2nd LSAT Diary
Studying this week has gotten off to a slow start but I’m starting to recognize my limitations and address them.

I’m a TV addict. I can’t tell you the countless hours I have spent mindlessly flipping through 150 channels only to end up watching Law and Order reruns. Seriously - they're on all hours of the day and night! Take for example, last Saturday, when I found myself caught up in a three-hour Buffy the Vampire Slayer marathon. Unless the LSAC starts asking questions about how to simultaneously kill three vampires, this was a colossal waste of an afternoon.

My solution has been to program my DVR for exactly 4 hours of television viewing pleasure per week. This way I can watch my favorite shows at a time that’s better conducive to my study schedule, and I turn the television off as soon as the show is over.

As much as I love studying at home and having easy access to the fridge, if I’m going to get serious this time I have to leave my humble abode and head to the library. Sometimes students need to treat studying like a full time job and commit to specific time schedules for studying or researching. By going to the library, I’m free of distractions and can focus on the task at hand. This is especially true on the days when I have 6 or 7 reading comprehension passages to go through and I can think of a 1001 things I’d rather be doing instead.

Recently, I visited my first-choice law school school. I got the chance to sit in on a property class, have a tour of the school with a 3L, and sit down one on one with an admissions counselor. If you haven’t visited a law school before, I highly encourage it! The property class was really interesting and dispelled any fears I had about the Socratic Method. The student tour was great because I found out about student employment on campus, daily study habits, and student housing - things you don't find in brochures on the school website.

The best part was sitting down with the admissions counselor. I really got a feel for what type of student they were looking for and I found out the personal statement carries more weight then I originally thought. I left the school energized knowing I really wanted to go there and that by studying hard for the LSAT would just mean I am one step closer!

Photo by finn

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Logic and Games

Here's something light to lead us into 2012 - a selection of links from Logic and Games over the past year:

* Antonin Scalia is apparently the Supreme Court's funniest justice. [ABA Journal]

* Hot Coffee, a new movie about the McDonald's lawsuit, shows how one incident led to a campaign for tort reform. [AboveTheLaw]

* Flowchart helps you decide whether to comment on your acquaintance's Facebook status. [MSNBC]

* People who don't know The Onion is a satirical newspaper leave Facebook comments. [Literally Unbelievable]

* Pros and cons of having a smartphone, in comic strip form. [The Oatmeal]


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December 28, 2011

Paying for Law School Video from LSAC

Jeff Hanson, a financial aid consultant at LSAC, has a great 45-minute lecture on Paying for Law School.

You can watch it on YouTube, but it's also embedded below.
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December 27, 2011

LSAT Diaries: Retaking The LSAT

LSAT Blog LSAT Diaries Retaking LSATThis installment of LSAT Diaries comes from Rosemary, a 28-year-old receptionist in Washington, D.C. She has some great advice below on getting started with your LSAT prep.

If you want to be in LSAT Diaries too, please fill out this survey.

Leave Rosemary some encouragement below in the comments!


Rosemary's LSAT Diary:

I have a confession to make...I'm a test retaker. Yep, that's right. Once wasn't enough, so I'm studying for the LSAT again. Sure, I’m not happy to be in this position, but this time around I have a better idea of what I’m getting into and the time commitment that studying for the LSAT entails.

So what went wrong? Honestly, I was naive about the time commitment needed to prepare for the test. I took an LSAT prep course and attended all the class sessions, but I didn’t do the homework outside of class. After 15 weeks, my test scores barely budged.

I don’t like the position that I’m in, but my previous experience has made me more determined to take the time to prepare so that I can retake this test and move on with my life.

This time around, I know that I need to be better prepared from the beginning and the first step is developing a study schedule that fits my life. I’m currently finishing my Bachelor's, taking 2 evening classes while working full time. Since this week I needed to focus on midterms, I decided to get some of the housekeeping out of the way, so I can get off to a good start the first week.

1. Make a study schedule.

I’m using Steve’s 4-month LSAT study plan as a template and making adjustments as needed. I’m using a calendar I can access from my phone and home in order to keep track of the assignments I have each week. Because I still have schoolwork, having a master calendar allows me to balance my LSAT study schedule with upcoming papers and exams.


2. Define a study space.

Everything I’ve heard about studying for the LSAT says that it’s best to study in an atmosphere as close to your actual testing experience as possible. I know from past experience that my test site conducts the tests in large lecture halls with tables. I dug out my LSAT prep books and set up my dining room as my LSAT zone.


3. Register for the LSAT.

There are only two locations in my area that administer the test and if both of those locations fill up the next closest test site is 200 miles away. So because I like to always be on the safe side I took five minutes out of my day to register and pay to take the LSAT at the same testing site that I took the test at last year.

Photo by bdorfman
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Logic and Games

* Why it's important to fully answer everything on your application related to Character and Fitness. [ABA Journal]

* In 2001, Michael Lewis wrote this article about a 15-year-old who represented himself as a legal expert on an Internet message board. [NYTimes]

* The Hangover 2 is sued by Louis Vuitton for using fake luggage. [Gawker]

* The 7 books in the life cycle of any president. [The Smoking Jacket]

* I only insert one space after a period myself, but I don't believe that this 1000+ word article on the topic is necessary. [Slate]


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December 23, 2011

"About the LSAT" Video From LSAC

LSAT Blog About LSAT Video LSACJames LoriƩ, a senior test developer at LSAC, has put together a great PowerPoint video giving a general overview of the LSAT. It's called "About the LSAT" and is just under 19 minutes long.

You can watch it on YouTube, but it's also embedded below.






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December 22, 2011

LSAT Diary: Preparing for an LSAT Retake

LSAT Blog Diary Preparing LSAT RetakeThis installment of LSAT Diaries comes from Anne, who retook the LSAT in October 2011 and scored a 164!

She's got some great LSAT advice for you about she prepared the second time around.

If you want to be in LSAT Diaries, please fill out this survey. (You can be in LSAT Diaries whether you've taken the exam already or not.)

Thanks to Anne for sharing her experience and advice, and please leave your questions for her below in the comments!

Anne's LSAT Diary:

It took me a while to decide that I actually wanted to go to law school. I had the idea in the back of my head for quite some time, but it wasn’t until the then-current admissions cycle had come and gone until I actually got my act together. I was a 22-year-old go-getting business major with a 3.81 GPA but no real knack for standardized tests or real life law know-how other than taking a few business law classes in which the teachers suggested I might give it a try. I honestly was just good at being a student—and it was this attribute that I probably owe most to my success in my law school journey.

I graduated a semester early from my mediocre-ly good and medium sized private school, and it was then I decided my next “semester” off would be a good time to focus my LSAT studies and get the application process underway. I was still living in a college house with four other friends, and I still pretty much considered myself a student during this time because essentially, I still spent all my time studying, on campus, or working. Most of—scratch that—all of the people I knew took prep courses. In my formative LSAT studying stages, I started researching different prep courses to weigh my options. I did a lot of research.

For some reason I just didn’t want to cough up the couple grand it would cost for a prep course, and saw one of my roommates going to the four hour biweekly sessions and didn’t really feel like subjecting myself to the same thing. I had flashbacks of my SAT prep course back in high school, and how I had wasted the better part of a thousand dollars not really paying attention or getting anything out of it.

Now don’t get me wrong: I’m sure a lot of people reap huge benefits from these courses. Given unlimited funds, I would most likely take one too. It was more the perceived value to me. For me, it just simply wasn’t the right choice. I’m not dirt poor, but I do largely support myself and paying that much for a class would be a stretch. I reasoned with myself, wondering if there was any possible way I could do it on my own. I really did look at all of my options. I was an extremely hard worker, as evidenced by my almost straight A record, early graduation, and working my way through college, and on and on and on. Could I do this on my own?

During my research, I found Steve’s LSAT blog. This is how I finally figured I’d give it a try and see how I did studying on my own. What’s the worst that could happen, right? Find out that maybe law school really isn’t for me? I bought the books and PrepTests he recommended and followed his study plan. I started studying far in advance—February for the June exam. I had the time, and I wanted to build up layers of studying over this period. I intermittently did PrepTests, timed or not, whole tests or sections.

I made myself study pretty much every single day, but tried not to pressure myself other than that. No time restrictions, and to be honest, probably not enough restrictions overall. I was pretty casual about the whole thing, telling myself I wanted something around a 160 or above (I used the free June 2007 LSAT PDF for a diagnostic exam before even cracking open a single LSAT book, and scored something like a 150). I took the June 2011 LSAT and was pretty complacent when I received my 159. It was so close… but just not quite there.

I swore to myself I’d never take it again, but I gave it a month or two, asked a few very wise people for advice, and finally decided I’d go for it. I’d always been very ambitious, and the pre-law advisor at my school told me that if I was willing to really crack down, I should go for it. So I did. I was a little harder on myself this time around, making myself do more five section tests, timing myself more strictly, and overall being more realistic. I didn’t baby myself this time, and was more committed to what I was doing. I went over every single question that I missed until I got it (okay… for the most part—and especially logic games), and tried to score more consistently on each test rather than the random 167 mixed in with the 158 two days later. Also, I think I was just refreshed. I had a new take and outlook on the test, and I was able to clear my head.

One of the biggest mistakes I made the first time around was focusing far too much on formal logic. If I have one piece of concrete advice for someone taking the LSAT, it would be not to focus too much on this. Sure, the contrapositive is important and useful, but this only scratches the surface of all the things you could get tangled up in. It’s not that you should wholly ignore it at all, just make sure you get the general idea and don’t worry about the details. I found almost no use for all the studying I did of these sections on the actual LSAT. Additionally, I did not focus nearly enough on reading. I thought “I can read! I don’t need to study this!” before my first test administration. WRONG. You need to learn to get into the head of the author. Become enthusiastic about the passage, just like Steve says. Mark up passages lightly, if that helps. Experiment with pre-reading or not pre-reading questions. In the end, I lightly marked up to save time and didn’t pre-read questions as it increased my time too much.

I also really found myself refreshed and with a new outlook on the wording of questions. I began to think like an LSAT writer, to get inside the head of the LSAT. I would start to pick up on nuances in wrong answer choices such as absolutes (ie an answer choice that states something such as “ALL scientists believe that the ozone layer will soon be depleted” versus a correct answer choice of “The general consensus of scientists at the conference seem to think that if action is not taken soon, the ozone will be in danger”) or wrong answer choices that didn’t refer back to the sources cited in the argument, ie choosing a wrong answer choice of “Aliens will invade the earth” vs. “The astronomers surveyed think that aliens will soon invade the earth” when astronomers were referred to in the original prompt. If you can start to have an eye for small things like this, something will click, and the LSAT will soon become a little bit simpler, if that’s possible.

Finally, I would say my last piece of advice is to go with your gut. I missed many questions on the first LSAT (yes—they give you your entire answer sheet to obsess over after, complete with erasure marks) from changing my correct answers to incorrect answers. This time around, I was a lot more confident. I tried not to change answers too much. Obviously, this comes with a caveat. Definitely go over a section if you have more time. But your first instinct is usually correct.

Maybe it was just having more time, maybe it was the 40-dollar tutor I found on Craigslist and met with once that I’m pretty convinced was actually a homeless man, or maybe it was my refreshed outlook. Maybe it’s because the June test is an afternoon test and the test I did better on was a morning test. Maybe it’s because I had more confidence, got dressed that second time instead of wearing sweats, and believed in myself. There are a million large and tiny factors that changed between the two administrations, but I do know that I simply could not have done what I did without Steve’s blog. It gave me the resources I needed to embark on this journey alone. I took the administration in October, and this time scored a 164, and I’ll take it! Thank you Steve for your tireless work, your response to e-mails when you have never even met me nor received much money from me, and your passion for the LSAT. Your blog has truly been an asset.

Photo by bobaubuchon
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Logic and Games

* Answers to a variety of questions about law school. [NYTimes]

* UC Irvine School of Law claims impressive results for its first graduating class. [Reuters]

* The origins of Occupy Wall Street. [New Yorker]

* Data mining comes to the college classroom. [Chronicle]

* A landlord in Cincinnati has a creative excuse for a "Whites Only" pool sign. [Gawker]

* Somali insurgents are on Twitter, and the U.S wants to shut down their account. [NYTimes; NYTimes; Twitter]

* Do you ever feel like Marshall from How I Met Your Mother? [YouTube]


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December 21, 2011

LSAT Reading Comp Explanations PDF

LSAT Blog LSAT Reading Comp Explanations PDFComplete Reading Comp Explanations for LSAT PrepTests 19-28 (June 1996 LSAT - June 1999 LSAT) are now available for instant PDF download.

(You can get the exams / questions themselves in the 10 More Actual, Official LSAT PrepTests, which are sold separately.)

One of the most common requests I get from my students and blog readers is for explanations of particular LSAT questions.

Although I'll explain any question in my LSAT tutoring, there's a limit to the amount I have time to write down.

Fortunately, I just learned that fellow LSAT tutor Graeme has written complete explanations for every Reading Comprehension question in PrepTests 19-28 (June 1996 LSAT - June 1999 LSAT). Not only do these explain why the right answer is right, but they also discuss why each wrong answer is wrong.

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At the moment, Complete Reading Comprehension Explanations for PrepTests 19-28 is only $29.97. That's less than $3 per RC section explained and less than 75 cents per passage explained, and you get one 174-page PDF with all the explanations.

Enjoy!

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For free, you can download the Reading Comprehension explanations for the first 2 passages of PrepTest 29 (October 1999 LSAT) (PDF) to see what they're like.

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Please note:

-In order to benefit from these, you must separately get the Reading Comprehension questions contained within LSAT PrepTests 19-28 - the LSAT exams from June 1996 - June 1999. This download does not include the actual LSAT Reading Comprehension questions from these exams.

-This is a PDF available for instant download after submitting payment via PayPal. Download Adobe Acrobat Reader at http://get.adobe.com/reader/ and ensure that your copy of this software is up to date.

-If you're already registered with PayPal, the instant download link will be sent to your PayPal email address. Otherwise, it'll be sent to whichever email address you submit.

-Due to the nature of digital downloads, LSAT Blog cannot offer any refunds. All sales are final.

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December 20, 2011

LSAT Video: Hitler Reacts to Getting His LSAT Score

LSAT Blog reader kmalina7 created this great LSAT-themed parody of the movie Downfall and graciously allowed me to share it with all of you:



Please thank kmalina7 and post your thoughts in the comments below!

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Logic and Games

* Must-read article describing how ABA requirements keep the cost of legal education high. [NYTimes]

* Did you know that Kim Jong-il didn't defecate? Some fun facts about the Dear Leader. [Herald Sun]

* If the TSA finds weed in your carry-on bag and lets it slide, don't tweet about it like Freddie Gibbs did. [Forbes]

* Great law school exam question: would zombie Abraham Lincoln be eligible for the presidency? [Dorf on Law]

* In case you missed this gem, Jerry Sandusky's defense attorney claims he showered with young boys because "he was teaching them hygiene skills." [Daily News]

* Scientists conduct experiments to determine why some people learn from their mistakes while others don't. [Wired]

* A critical look at Freakonomics. [American Scientist]


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December 16, 2011

February 2012 LSAT Questions / Answers

LSAT Blog February 2012 LSAT Questions AnswersThe February 2012 LSAT might seem far off, but it'll be here before you know it. What would you like to see on the blog between now and then?

Please leave your questions for me (and for each other) in the comments, I'll do my best to answer as many of your questions as possible between now and February.

Also, if you're looking for general advice on improving in Logic Games, Logical Reasoning, or Reading Comprehension, please note that I've already written plenty of blog posts on these topics and have integrated them into my LSAT study schedules.

Quick request: please leave a name rather than posting as "Anonymous." It makes it easier for everyone to respond to specific comments. Thanks!

Photo by lwr
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December 15, 2011

LSAT Diary: Retaking the LSAT

LSAT Blog LSAT Diary Retaking The LSATThis installment of LSAT Diaries comes from Sarah, who took the December 2011 LSAT and is currently waiting for her score.

She's got some great LSAT advice for you about she prepared the second time around.

If you want to be in LSAT Diaries, please fill out this survey. (You can be in LSAT Diaries whether you've taken the exam already or not.)

Thanks to Sarah for sharing her experience and advice, and please leave your questions for her below in the comments!

Sarah's LSAT Diary:

Before I took the LSAT the first time, in October 2011, I was scared out of my mind.

I'm usually a very good test taker: my first time taking a practice LSAT I scored a 163. I set up what I thought was a good schedule, bought the necessary books, and settled in for a solid 2-month study period.

What I noticed as the two months went by really threw me: I was doing worse and worse on Logical Reasoning. I started out with around a -2 or -3 on the section. This, I thought, was very good, but since it wasn't perfect I got out my handy books and looked through them for any tips or tricks I might use to narrow my margin of error. I went through the questions in the book, worked on the LSAT PrepTests, and looked over my mistakes, making sure I understood where I went wrong. The whole time I kept making more and more errors. I went from a -3 to a -5, and at my worst I made 11 mistakes on a single section.

Finally, it was the day of the LSAT. I had done a PrepTest the day before, and scared myself silly because I scored a 159, not finishing the Reading Comprehension section and scoring a -9 on an LR section. I was completely frazzled when I walked in to the test room. When I finished, I was so relieved to have it done and behind me that I couldn't stop talking or smiling for at least an hour.

Three weeks later came the bad news: I scored a 158. This was the worst score I had ever gotten on an LSAT. After a ten minute crying jag and asking the cosmos “why me?”, I pulled myself together, signed up for the December sitting, and prepared to study for a re-take.

This time, I corrected exactly where I went wrong in my previous round of study. First, I did not take enough practice tests, or if I did, I took one section at a time. Second, when I did write a section of the test, I often did not time myself doing it. Third, I did not fill in a bubble sheet when I wrote practice tests. Lastly, I concentrated far too much on the questions in the book, which were NOT actual LSAT questions. This in particular, I think, is what made my score decrease progressively on the Logical Reasoning section.

Studying for the re-take in December consisted entirely of taking timed LSATs. I saw my score in Logical Reasoning, and the test itself, rise considerably. At one point I actually had a perfect LR section, and scored about a third of my tests in the 170's (my highest was a 173), which I never managed to do the first time around.

This time, I walked in to the test feeling nervous, but under control. I hadn't done a test the day before. I had drunk my weak hotel coffee, ate my homemade muffin, taped my picture to the LSAT ticket, and was ready to roll.

What I really want to stress with this whole experience is that re-taking the test is hard, but not the end of the world. If you did not score as well as you had hoped, try again. Try a different strategy, look for a person or a community to help you get through, look at where you went wrong the first time around.This time, you will know exactly what to expect.

Photo by bdorfman

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Logic and Games

* UChicago Law posts detailed employment data. [Above The Law]

* A white Forbes columnist writes a column called "If I were a poor black kid." [Forbes, Scientific American, WNYC, GOOD]

* You probably haven't ever been as embarrassed as this TV reporter. [Gawker]

* However, these Fox News reporters face some surprising results on camera, too. [YouTube]

* For the ladies in the house, the latest Ryan Gosling tumblr. [Law School Ryan Gosling]


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December 13, 2011

LSAT Diary: LSAT Studying With A Family

LSAT Blog Diary LSAT Studying With FamilyThis installment of LSAT Diaries comes from Jon in Richmond, Virginia. He writes:
I'm a bit of a non-traditional, 32, PhD in chemistry, married, two (little) kids. I work for a Big Pharma company. Oh, and my younger brother is currently in law school. I very much want to beat his LSAT score (161). Well, I really want to crush it.
If you want to be in LSAT Diaries too, please fill out this survey. (You can be in LSAT Diaries whether you've taken the exam already or not.)

Please leave Jon some encouragement and advice below in the comments!


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(Quick note: Below, LG=Logic Games, LR=Logical Reasoning, and RC=Reading Comprehension.)

Jon's LSAT Diary:

Day 1:
7:09: Rise and Shine

8:10: The wife and kids are out the door. I toast a Pop-Tart, grab a snack for the kids, pick up my computer bag, and head out myself. My bag is lighter without The Next 10 LSATs book. I finally got a chance to photocopy a couple of games sections. The photocopies are in the bag. I'm going to try to take a couple of ten minute breaks during my day to do a puzzle or two.

5:00: I've been very busy in the lab for the last couple of weeks and today was no different. All morning was spent getting four experiments going. The afternoon was filled with documenting the experiments and attending a meeting that was actually fairly productive. No chance to squeeze in a quick game.

5:10: I took a few minutes to search my email for a message that I have from my brother about his LSAT score. I'm trying to find which test he took. My brother's a 2L at a Boston law school (not Harvard). I have every intention of destroying his LSAT score. I know it's immature, but competition is a good motivator for me. So is shame. He got a 161. I'm aiming for 171+. December 2006. I'll have to find out which PrepTest that is. I plan on taking that test right before my official test in June. He was practicing in the low 170's but only scored a 161? I'll have to ask him about that later.

5:25: I leave work to pick up my two kids and head home for dinner and some family time.

8:50: With the kids in bed and my wife in the garage using our treadmill, I have some time to study. I usually study at the kitchen table, but I'm just not feeling it tonight. I decided to sit in a comfortable chair and review Grouping games. The games are my weakest section in the test. It just takes me too long to to work through them. My chemistry background has trained me to be very deliberate and careful in approaching problems. The time limit's killing me. I've been getting better and am working on improving my pace. I managed to get through a few games.

11:30: I decided to do a quick workout myself instead of getting right to studying after the wife went to bed. Given the progress I made during the early evening, I decide to do Section 1 of PrepTest 34. Ah, reading comprehension (RC). Easily my best section on the test. I whip through it with a minus 2. I'm alright with missing one of them, but I should have gotten the question about the anteaters.

12:20: I decide to call it a night. This is an early night for me.


Day 2:
6:50: My daughter is making sure we get an early start this morning.

8:30: I should have pretty much the same routine at work today. All morning will be at the lab bench with the afternoon full of paperwork. I may be able to find 10 minutes or so to tackle a game.

5:00: I've done all that I need to do today. I'm going to do the first game from PrepTest31. Let's figure out everyone's locker assignments!

5:10: Wow, I zipped through that in 5 minutes. I had done it before, but I didn't really remember it all that well. I'm pleased with how that went.

7:15: I manage to read a few pages of a book about the Seven Days campaign during the Civil War around Richmond, Va while my son is watching Scooby-Doo before heading upstairs to bed. I tell myself I'm doing RC prep.

8:30: I was just sitting down to study when my wife came back in from the garage. She's having some problem with her iPod. It's dead. I wanted a new iPod but it looks like she's going to get one instead. I guess the practice with grouping games will have to wait.

11:30: That's twice. Just as I was getting situated my daughter started crying. I'm at the kitchen table and ready to go again. I'll be really quiet so I don't wake anybody up.

1:00 am: I worked through the grouping game setup exercises and moved onto the first practice game. I have done the PrepTest the game is from already, but the material wasn't too fresh. I made it through the game in about 11 minutes with one stupid mistake. There are 7 or 8 questions so an extra minute or two might not be a real show stopper. It's bedtime.


Day 3:
6:50: This is getting old. I like getting up at 7:10 better.

8:36: My brother's replied to my email about the disparity between his practice LSAT scores and his official score. His story is that some guy next to him was flipping test booklet pages pretty quickly while he was stuck in the same section. He started freaking out that he was going too slow so he started to hurry through his first section (games). It took him a few minutes to remember that the order of the sections aren't the same for everybody. I guess he righted the ship after that, but the damage was already done.

You can only turn the pages a couple of times in the games section, but I guess his mental energies were too focused on the task at hand to realize that. He took the test once before, but he refuses to tell anybody his score. I'm sure that dismal performance was probably on his mind as well.

Noon: I'm going to take the first 15 minutes of my lunch to do game 2 in PrepTest 31, the CD store. I didn't like this game the first time I did it...

12:15: I still don't like it. I just have a hard time managing all of that information. I'm going to stay positive though. I've found something that I'm not good at so that means getting better at it should help my score. I see a good opportunity to to crack a piece of the LSAT code by figuring this one out. That will have to wait for later. I'm hungry.

4:30: I went to a chemistry seminar today. It was pretty boring (surprise), but seeing that I spend pretty much all of my free time on LSAT prep, my mind shifted into that mode during the presentation. I couldn't help but think about how the figures the speaker was using to tell us about his research were similar to games diagrams. Thinking about it during the talk, I realized that I've been so focused on getting the games questions answered in under 35 minutes that I've totally overlooked the key of the section. It's all about understanding how different pieces of information relate to one another.

I was reminded of instances where I've been stuck on a problem at work. I have all of this data in front of me. I know the answer is in the data somewhere, but I just couldn't see it. By changing how I look at the data, the answer I was looking for just jumps out at me. These games are basically the same thing. Once you take those random rules and put them into an order that really makes sense, inferences and question answers are much easier to find. Maybe I can take what I know about how I like to look at problems and add a wrinkle that will improve my score.

5:10: Back at work with a few minutes left until I have to leave to get my kids. There's plenty of time to do game 4 in PrepTest 31, building a partition.

5:25: I worked through this one with an eye to time and did alright, but after I looked at it a second time, I elaborated on one of my diagrams and suddenly all the pieces fell into place. I looked back over the questions and the answers were very easy to find with my improved diagram. I've known that the setup is key, but this example has really shown me that I need to look for ways to make the rules more visual. We'll see if it helps improve my score. Must beat the little bro.

9:30: With the wife in the garage, the kids in bed, and The Office over, I'm back at my study spot, the kitchen table, to work on that CD store game again.

9:50: After flailing around with the arrows in Logic Games and not making much progress, I tried applying my new insight into arranging the game info into a way that helps me see the connections better and get a better sense of how the different rules are connected. I was using the photocopy that I used to do the game earlier in the day so it was all marked up. My previous work was distracting me when I tried to answer the questions. I'll try it again tomorrow night with a new copy. (I need to remember to take "The Next 10" with me to work tomorrow and make some more copies.)

11:30: I'm feeling a little sleepy and my body is tired from the workout that I just finished, but I'll take a crack at a Logical Reasoning (LR) section tonight just to mix things up a little (PrepTest 34 Section 2).

12:30: I should have listened to my gut and gone to bed. I made some very careless mistakes. That's kind of par for the course for me on this section though. I did better back when I first started studying. For whatever reason, I'm not reading the questions and answer options as carefully as I did back then, and I'm really making some stupid mistakes. I went back and looked at one that I missed. I totally skipped the correct answer choice when I was going through them the first time. On another question an assumption in the argument jumped right out at me the second time I read the question, but I totally missed it the first time. I'm going to chalk this -6 performance up to fatigue, but I'm going to take away the lesson that I need to be very deliberate in my reading.

Day 4:
8:05: I'm sure to grab my Next 10 book so I can photocopy some more games for practice. I've decided that's the only thing that will really help me at this point. Practice, practice, practice.

1:15: I had a few things to take care of before I went downstairs to get my experiments up and running again so I'm really behind. I have plenty of other things to do besides run these routine experiments. I need to catch up on some other work, write an abstract for a poster that I plan to present at a national meeting, and get started on a training presentation that will cover some pretty technical information, but getting these experiments going is my top priority everyday. I could work on my abstract or presentation at home in the evening, but I need all the time I can get for studying. Anyway, there is no time to do a game during my lunch.

5:15: I was able to make new copies of a few games. The photocopier is in a lab where only a few people work, all of whom are already out the door. Using the photocopier for non-work purposes isn't why I'm trying to keep people out of my business. I don't want people to start talking about my plans to take the LSAT. Info like that tends to get more distorted the higher up the management ladder it goes. I don't need to deal with rumors right now. I have enough on my plate. These new copies won't be used tonight though. I have other plans for my study time.

10:00: The wife ran out to buy a new iPod, so I decide to take this rare chunk of time in the early evening to do the second LR section of PrepTest 34. I was ruminating about my crappy performance all day so this is my chance to take another crack at an LR section to see if I can improve on my sub-par performance from the night before. It's still pretty early in the evening so I figured I would be a little sharper. I was in the final few difficult questions when my wife got back home. She didn't say anything to me, but I found it harder to concentrate once she was back.

It was another -6 performance. I don't feel like I made any careless mistakes like I did the night before. I actually resisted the temptation to take the trap answer on a couple of questions and worked to the right answer. Nevertheless, it's less than comforting to be stuck in this range. I just keep telling myself that I have plenty of time. Getting over this hump is probably going to be tough so I just have to keep on plugging.

1:00: I pushed the LR frustration back for an hour and a half or so and did a few practice Logic Games. Improving in this section will be the biggest benefit to my score so I need to keep doing what I can to improve. Like I said in this morning's post, practice, practice, practice.


Day 5:
9:00: Today is Saturday and Saturday always starts with a trip out with the family for breakfast followed by our weekly grocery shopping. These trips are usually pretty crazy, remember my kids are 3 and 1 and a half. This morning is no exception. I was up with my daughter for about an hour while we were waiting for some Motrin to kick in to help her with some teething pain. I was up until 1 studying, up with my daughter from 2:30 to 3:30, and up and getting ready for the day at 7:45. I'm should be alright for a little while, but I'm thinking that I'll take a nap while the kids are napping today. I really need the rest. My daughter needs the rest too. She's stubborn on a good day, but she's impossible on a night after she's hasn't slept well. I'm already looking forward to nap time.

12:30: I was falling asleep while I was watching Scooby-Doo with my son before his nap (I used to watch Scooby-Doo when I was his age, it's a strange experience to watch it again with my own kid.). I'm thinking I need to sleep more than I need to do logic games practice.

4:00: Yes, I did need to sleep. Bless my wife for letting me sleep for 3 hours on a Saturday afternoon!

12:00 am: Most of the night has been spent on Daddy duty. My son is getting a bike from the Easter bunny tomorrow and I need to finish putting it together. I'm waiting for the cheap pump that we bought to inflate the tires to cool down from taking care of the front tire before I do the reat tire. I'm tackling the next grouping practice game. It's about researchers learning new languages.


Day 6:
10:45: All day was spent doing family stuff. I'm hoping to do 4 or 5 practice games tonight. I'm planning on doing a timed games section as part of my diary grand finale tomorrow night. Must practice, practice, practice, practice.

12:45: I worked through the last couple grouping games and two grouping/linear combination games. I've discovered that I'm really bad at grouping games where the position of the variables are not defined. I'm not a systematic enough thinker to work through all of the inferences that are the key to that kind of game. Identifying that weakness gives me something very targeted and specific to work on. I have also realized that I take too much time making sure I have the correct answer. I identify an answer that I am confident in, but then I take another minute or two to convince myself that it's correct before moving on to the next one. I'm losing a big chunk of time in that one activity alone. I'll have to pay better attention to that tendency the next time I do a timed section.


Day 7:
8:30: I had a horrible time getting to sleep last night. Right after I feel asleep, my wife woke me up to help her get my daughter settled. I feel asleep holding her in a glider that we keep in her room. I got back in bed around 5. I got 4 fragmented hours of sleep last night. There will be plenty of caffeine in my day. At least I'll be plenty busy at work.

12 pm: I have game 3 from PrepTest 31 in my bag. I know how to do it pretty quickly, but I'm curious to see just how long it will take.

12:10: It took me 5 minutes, and that's after spending way too much time confirming that I had the correct choice identified on one of the questions.

Midnight: I tackled section 4 of PrepTest 31. I am encouraged by my performance. I only missed 2 that I answered and didn't get to 8 of them. This doesn't sound great, but it's an improvement over where I was a month or so ago. The practice is helping. I skipped most of the first game after not being able to make much headway with the questions. When I went back to review the questions I quickly identified that I missed the key rule. I figured everything out pretty quickly after that insight.

I have a good feeling that seeing my mistake will allow me to identify a similar rule in a game that much faster the next time I encounter a similar game. The practice is already helping (I need to make that my mantra for the next couple of weeks). This process of seeing how the rules relate to one another and how to best attack the questions is definitely coming much faster. I could spend 45 minutes trying to figure out one game a few weeks ago. Now I can usually find the key to the game in a minute or two.

You would think my advanced degree (I have a PhD in chemistry) would help me out in this situation, but the way I think about chemistry is much different than the way I have to think about these questions. I am basically training myself to think in an entirely different way. It's definitely a challenge, but I know that I'm up to it. I just have to keep practicing because...The practice is already helping.

As for my pseudo-score on PrepTest 31, a 163. A solid RC section, two alright but could have been better LR sections, and a not so great but better than I've been doing games section. The score is right where I've been for the last couple of PrepTests, but I feel like my grasp of the test is improving. I try not to worry too much about the score at this point. I only calculate it to gauge my progress and to acclimate myself for how the raw score relates to the scaled score. I'll put more value in my score when I start taking four or five sections in a row. I'll probably have to start the test at 10 pm or so some night. I'll wrap up around 12:30. I'm going to take a couple of Saturday afternoons to take a full PrepTest with a fake experimental section, but as this diary shows, I just don't have the luxury of big chunks of time. That's just the reality of my life.

I still need to order PrepTest 51 (that's the test my brother took to get his 161). I know there are plenty of good reasons to study hard, but I am highly motivated by competition. I'll keep practicing whenever I can find the time. Thanks for reading.


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Logic and Games

* The ABA is offering 20 scholarships to increase diversity in the legal profession. [ABA]

* A story of one woman in Washington State who became an attorney without going to law school. [Seattle PI]

* This paralegal appears to have taken nearly $300,000 of her law firm's money to go on vacation and buy a house. [ABA Journal]

* What do spammers and HIV have in common? This doctor may have the answer. [LATimes]

* Stephen Colbert (out-of-character) interviews scientist Neil Degrasse Tyson. [YouTube]

Continue Reading...»

December 9, 2011

Choosing a Law School Using US News Rankings

LSAT Blog Choosing Law School USNews RankingsHow should you use law school rankings when making a decision?

Because the rankings are such a widely-used indicator of a law school's prestige, it's important to be aware of them, at the very least.

To ignore them would be paying over $100,000 for something when you don't know its value.

Of course, the rankings are far from perfect, but you can still use them as a starting point when thinking about where to apply.

After all, it's overwhelming to wade through the dozens of pamphlets, folders, and emails you'll soon be receiving from law schools (if you haven't started receiving them already). Having an outside evaluator like U.S. News to cut through the clutter with some hard numbers is incredibly useful.

They can:

-serve as a general guideline to help you get a sense of a law school's prestige.

-give you a sense of how others would view your having attended a given school.

-help you determine the schools to which you have a realistic chance of acceptance given your LSAT score and undergraduate GPA.

If you haven't yet taken the LSAT, but have a sense of what your undergraduate GPA is or will be, you can figure out what kind of LSAT numbers you'll likely need to have a strong chance at a particular law school.

As such, the rankings can help you to formulate a list of law schools to which you should apply, helping you to select safety schools, match schools, and reach schools.




How much should you actually let the rankings influence your decisions?

The importance of the rankings will vary from person to person. In large part, it depends on the type of law you wants to practice after law school.

If you're looking to go to a corporate law firm, the rankings are very important. Many law firms disproportionately recruit from certain law schools and are significantly more likely to consider a resume from a "T14" school than others ("T14" is a term used to refer to the 14 law schools consistently listed in the top 14 of the U.S. News law school rankings).

However, if you're looking to practice in other areas (such as human rights law), become a sole practitioner (opening your own law firm), use your law degree simply to add to your skill set for your already-existing business, or in conjunction with another graduate degree, the law school's ranking and national reputation may not mean as much.



Enough about the rankings - what else matters?

Financial Aid:

Well, if you're the kind of person who's not planning to write one big check for law school tuition without batting an eye, you may want to seriously consider financial aid offers.

Many law schools will give merit aid to woo applicants with LSAT scores higher than the school's typical student. If your LSAT score's significantly higher than their average, schools will likely want to grab you to help you boost their position in the rankings. They might be willing to pay you for the privilege with reduced tuition costs.


Location:

It's also important to recognize that rankings don't take into account the fact that a law school is always better-known in its region of the country than elsewhere.

For example, if you want to practice law in NYC, you might want to consider Fordham over UCLA, even though UCLA has a higher US News ranking. NYC law firms and residents are more familiar with Fordham Law and its graduates than those of UCLA Law. After all, a significantly greater number of Fordham law graduates settle and practice in NYC than do UCLA law graduates.

There's also the fact that public universities offer lower tuition to in-state residents. If you've established in-state residence, you can take advantage of lower tuition if accepted. Public (state) law schools also set aside a certain number of seats for in-state residents, so it can be easier to gain acceptance if you've established residence.


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For further reading, see this U.S. News law school rankings article in which I'm featured.

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Which other factors are affecting which law schools you're considering?
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December 8, 2011

LSAT Diary: Studying in Washington D.C.

LSAT Blog LSAT Diary Studying Washington D.C.This installment of LSAT Diaries comes from Danielle, a 25-year-old graduate student in Washington D.C. In her diary, she talks about what she's learned in her LSAT studying thus far.

If you want to be in LSAT Diaries too, please fill out this survey. (You can be in LSAT Diaries whether you've taken the exam already or not.)

Please leave Danielle some encouragement and advice below in the comments!

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Danielle's LSAT Diary:

1) The way the LSAT Makers pose their questions, the way they present the stimuli, and the way they set up the answer choices is all highly contingent upon some structure that the test taker is supposed to adhere to. How does one adhere to something they know nothing about? My point, exactly.

Thus my schedule:

-7am: get up to drink a glass of water (I drink at least 9 glasses a day)
-7:30am-8am: Ab workout or some quick 30min workout.
-8am-9am: Look for some breakfast. Something light but filling. I need it to get focused on my work day. I eat 4 to 5 times a day to keep energy up, but no carbs after 9!
-9am-12pm: As a technical research analyst, I get to look at 1000s of lines a SAS code and output per day and write about the quality of the data my firm receives. Sounds boring but I love it. It requires extreme attention to detail and organization. (I one snack within this 3 hour period)
-12pm-1pm: 1hour cardio workout and strength training. Helps me relax and relieve the stresses of writing and analyzing code all day.
-1:pm-1:15pm: fix lunch and get back to work
-1:15pm-5pm: work
-5pm-6pm: break to watch the Golden Girls, update twitter, make contacts, check on loved ones. etc.
-6pm-10:00pm: LSAT Prep--I want to sit in front of this material for at least as long as I will have to on the official test day!
-10pm-12am: Jot down meals, adhoc tasks, and watch syndicated TV shows until I fall asleep.

The weekend mirrors closely what I do during the week, except I study longer for the LSAT, rest more, and most importantly, I regain my social status :0). With family and friends all living somewhat far away, and a mom who's undergoing chemo, the stresses of regular life can easily manifest themselves into utter disruption of my structural environment, so I try my best to get my have-to's out of the way in order to have ample time to tend to my need/want-to's.

When I've failed at the LSAT, I never successfully established this environment, and I'm afraid if I don't do it now, I'll never get over this obstacle, and what's worse, despite my success thus far in most every other aspect of my life, whatever it is I'm standing on may start to crumble under me. I can't have that. Just that simple. I have to meet the expectation!

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2) Tonight, I focused in on the LR section: implication questions (MBT, MBF, Inferences). Though I am pretty familiar with the every aspect of the test, I approached my preparation very differently this time around. Ever since I realized my biggest weakness: lack of consistent ability to properly identify WHY wrong answers are wrong, I wanted to take time, while I have time on my side, to slow down and get through the easier LSAT questions to see where I was getting tripped up in my deductions.

It actually helped quite a bit. I noticed that the questions that I got wrong were precisely the ones where I failed to explain what was wrong with the answer choice. Either that or I didn't read the answer choice carefully enough. I don't know any other way to resolve this latter problem but to entrench myself in this material. Of course, I'm planning to do just that.

It's amazing to me how simple my mistakes are and how easily these little mistakes can manifest themselves into 3 years of under performance. I'm a 25 year old graduate student attending a top tier institution, and I still get tripped up by reading short paragraphs. lol. Wow, how unfortunate. I pride myself on paying attention to detail, yet I miss many of the most telling clues in the English language of an important inference.

I'm not discouraged. I make very good arguments, otherwise. I just don't have enough practice breaking a part the arguments of those who are paid to make "holey" arguments. lol. But this is a true lesson in being a sharper individual.

I sit in some of my graduate classes and get frustrated as I try to keep up with some of the seemingly irrelevant topics of dispute many of my classmates develop, but I'm starting to realize that I do that because I tune out when an argument doesn't make sense instead of focusing on just what doesn't make sense. Who knew that it would come in handy one day!

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3) Something I learned today: Logical Opposites
a) must be true (MBT) = cannot be false <- logical opposites -> not necessarily true = could be false

b) must be false (MBF) = cannot be true <- logical opposites -> not necessarily false = could be true

Now, while I typically thought that "could be false" and "could be true" are analogous concepts since something that could be true can ALSO be false, in terms of the LSAT, this isn't really the case. Here's why:

When a question asks us, which of the following "could be false", this means that only 1 answer choice "could be false," while the other 4 choices will be the logical opposite of "could be false." This means that the 4 WRONG answer choices "cannot be false = MBT."

This suggests that "could be false" and "could be true" are not really the same concepts on the LSAT because if the question had INSTEAD asked, which of the following "could be true," then this means that only 1 answer choice "could be true" while the 4 WRONG answer choices "cannot be true = MBF."

It's pretty interesting how they are trying to trip us up like that. After all these years of carefully choosing my words to express myself, apparently according to the LSAT, I still haven't gotten it right!

This is a clear example of why we can't use our "outside" logic on the LSAT. Damn...that's too bad, too. Just when I was getting used to feeling like a goddess of written expression, I've got to learn how to express myself all over again.

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4) One thing I read a lot about in these LSAT prep books is attitude. Though the author's attitude is particularly important in reading LSAT stimuli, what's equally important, if not more, is how we, the test takers approach the material. That's the one thing I've never been able to understand. I remember the first official test I sat for: I was SOOO confident. The next time, for that reason, I was not so confident. But this last time, confident!! Despite those yearly 2 point increases, my enthusiasm toward the material, and the confidence I felt, my score just isn't creeping up like I think it should. I don't quite understand it. And maybe that's it: I don't understand it.

There must be something I'm missing, and I haven't a clue how to fix it. I'm breaking into this test inside-out nowadays. I'm not taking any shortcuts! Not that I did before, but I know I didn't push myself to the limit. How do I exhaust the possibilities in such a short period of time?

Practice. Practice brings insights. And from insights come better instincts. Logical instincts. lol. Oxymoron. Despite what these tests say, I still believe in my abilities. I believe that I'm among the intellectual giants. No one has realized it yet, not even me, because I haven't put it into practice! See!! I can reason! Flawless argument right there! The key there is that just because I believe something doesn't make it true...at least not LSAT world.

In my otherwise, sensible world, if I can think of such a thing; it is. Thanks Descartes!

I believe it! I believe in me, and I'll do what it takes to bring those beliefs to fruition.

Goodnight!

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5) I'm weighed down today. I did make some progress, but not as much as I anticipated. I got tripped up on Quasars today. I hate that problem, but I will learn to love it. My hope is that it's one of the more difficult problems, but somehow I doubt it. Answer (C) is the choice I wanted.

[Ed. Danielle is referring to PrepTest 29, Section 4, Question 23 - p. 42 of The Next 10 Actual, Official LSAT PrepTests.

My explanation of the question: Quasars' light takes 500 million years to reach Earth, but anything that burns at that rate can't last more than 100 million years. As such, any quasar light you see is from quasars that no longer exist - they've already burned themselves into nonexistence. -Steve]

I was skeptical from the beginning because it closely mirrored what was said in the stimulus.

What was the difference? Sadly, it took me more than 35 minutes to figure it out. As I mentioned, I was suspect because MBT question is in the implication family; it is a deduction that must be made precisely because it isn't stated in the stimulus. So something that sounds exactly the same is most likely to be wrong. Nevertheless, there is a key distinction: location.

"anything that far away to appear [...] the way quasars..." vs. "anything that appears as bright as quasars..."

Anything that appears as bright as quasars may, in fact, be closer or further away than where quasars are actually located. There is nothing in the answer choice that suggests the location of this "anything," but it's explicitly stated in the stimuli as "that far away..." which is a reference to 500million years. It would take at least this long to appear as bright from Earth ONLY IF it was truly THAT far away, but the WRONG answer choice wants to trick us into believing that the location of this "anything" is irrelevant as long as its appearance from Earth is the same. What if it's a tiny little star that's relatively closer? What if? What if?

I made up my own what if, but the fact that I could consider another alternative, solidified the right answer choice for me, despite how long it took.

Real tough work is a thankless job, I'm learning, at least in the beginning stages. One thing I need to prepare myself for is that there will be no parade at the finish line. I'm after a personal triumph here. This is one of them.

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6) Today, I focused on basic linear, and general, I don't have problems with it, as long as the rules lead to a healthy dose of deductions. Towards the end, I was spending more and more time and getting a few more wrong because I was spending too much time trying to figure out why I couldn't find a deduction. It gets particularly gruesome in unbalanced linear games, where you have to figure out which variables can be paired up and which ones can't, if it even matters. I feel like it's gotta be better just to start attacking the problems, if there are no obvious deductions, because it's too time consuming to look for universal deductions when things don't "line up" like the one-tier games. I'm looking to average 6 minutes per game, and I don't want too waste more than 2 to 3 minutes on diagramming the rules.

I've also noticed that these games tend to have many scenario/MBT questions. If we're supposed to focus on the individual scenario, then those MBTs will become a little more detailed than in the general diagram, so it makes sense to not focus too much on coming up with our own scenarios to make more deductions before we even approach the questions.

I've also been focusing on could be true/could be false questions in the LGs because I've been trying to deduce what category the 4 other answer choices will fall under. These are particularly useful when there isn't a scenario attached to it, because, for example, if the question asks, which of the following could be true (w/ no scenario attached), then that means that the 4 WRONG answer choices must be false; so, if we're really quick about it, we can build on our original diagram from these MBF statements as we proceed through the rest of the questions. I've noticed that a few questions build off others, so it can't hurt. I'll look for more opportunities to do this tomorrow.

Goodnight!

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7) "I Think; Therefore, I am...Dangerous"

That's a powerful statement that I'm beginning to understand, especially with regard to the LSAT. I'm learning that it's not just about figuring out what's being said in the stimulus; thinking particularly hard (and fast) on what their asking is the key!

It's my belief that the odds of me sitting and pondering (for roughly 1 min on 100 questions each) what exactly each argument maker is saying is next to none. I don't have that kind of time, and I'm generally uninterested in what people who try purposefully to sound confusing have to say (Yes, that means you, LSAT makers). That's one of my major mistakes on this test: thinking too much on the stimulus to grab something useful, instead of approaching the question with equally as much if not more focus than that which was given to the stimulus.

The question uncovers what's critically important about the stimulus, particularly from the perspective of the LSAT Makers. It gives us insight into a potentially confusing set of words, and it, thus, allows us to look at the stimulus in a more revealing way.

I know... I know. This is a dangerous claim; I'm not about to make the argument that reading the question stem first is the ideal way to go for all test takers. But it is more help than hurt for me. Without that question stem, I'm lost more often than not because my focus isn't on breaking down argument after argument without prompt. It's already bad enough that for at least half the test, we have less than a minute to get through and move from 1 generally uninteresting topic to another 48 to 52 times in under 70 minutes. I've sat this way for 3 times already, and I'm not going to do it again. Not without at least trying something different for once.

In general, I know that people don't ask us questions and THEN tell us to analyze what they're about to say based on those questions. Lawyers don't do this. And if we find that the only way to deconstruct someone's argument is to be prompted with a question first, then we're probably in bad shape. I respect this as true, but it is my belief that each new situation we encounter begs of us some type readjustment; we cannot go through life attacking things the same way all the time. If this were true, where would be today? Here's a better question: would we even BE?

All this to say, that for the purposes of this test, I'm placing more than average attention on the questions going forward, and while some may think it's risky, for the purposes of my prep this summer, it's making my thinking thing MUCH sharper, MUCH more ACCURATE, and MUCH less confused and bogged down. So I'm going with it, unless it begins to pose problems.

Hey there's a conditional statement! If it does not begin to pose a problem, THEN I'm going with it :-)

Peace Out, LSAT Fam!

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Logic and Games

* Working on your law school applications? Don't forget to check out all the admissions advice on the blog. [LSAT Blog]

* There's a reason lawyers aren't known for their ability to lay down beats. [AboveTheLaw, YouTube]

* U.S. law firms will soon be able to practice in South Korea. [JD Journal]

* What it looks like inside Amazon.com [Buzzfeed]

* A new startup has a creative solution to help Silicon Valley companies get around restrictive immigration policies. [Ars Technica]


Continue Reading...»

December 7, 2011

Why the February LSAT is Undisclosed

LSAT Blog Why February LSAT UndisclosedIf you take the June, October, or December LSAT, you'll be able to see (and download) the exam you took by logging into your LSAC account once you receive your score via email.

You'll also be able to see exactly which questions you answered incorrectly and what you chose for each.

(This assumes, among other things, you're not taking the LSAT outside North America, or taking a special Sabbath observers' administration.)

However, none of you who take the February LSAT will ever get to see the exam once you've taken it, nor will you get to see how many questions you answered incorrectly.

All you'll get is your score out of 180, and your percentile.

Why?

LSAC's Director of Communications, Wendy Margolis, explained via email:
The reason the February LSAT is nondisclosed is because it is important for LSAC to have some nondisclosed test forms and questions available in reserve for emergencies and special uses. The nondisclosed February test forms play this role. This has been LSAC practice since 1996. In case you need to point your students to information about test disclosure, the following language and link appears on the LSAC.org page for the February LSAT:

NOTE: Not every LSAT is disclosed.

http://www.lsac.org/JD/LSAT/test-disclosure.asp#disclosed

Basically, LSAC needs to have unreleased exams on file in case of inclement weather, and perhaps for use in overseas administrations (those outside the Americas) and Sabbath observers' administrations.

A lot of work goes into creating a single LSAT, and LSAC doesn't want to have to create a new exam for a relatively-small number of test-takers.

That's just the way it is, folks. Sorry.

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December 6, 2011

LSAT Logical Reasoning Solutions PDF

LSAT Blog Logical Reasoning Solutions PDFComplete Logical Reasoning Explanations for LSAT PrepTests 19-28 (June 1996 LSAT - June 1999 LSAT) are now available for instant PDF download.

(You can get the exams / questions themselves in the 10 More Actual, Official LSAT PrepTests, which are sold separately.)

One of the most common requests I get from my students and blog readers is for explanations of particular LSAT questions.

Although I'll explain any question in my LSAT tutoring, there's a limit to the amount I have time to write down.

Fortunately, I just learned that fellow LSAT tutor Graeme has written complete explanations for every Logical Reasoning question in PrepTests 19-28 (June 1996 LSAT - June 1999 LSAT).

That's explanations for 10 recent exams, each with 2 Logical Reasoning sections, so you'll get explanations for 20 sections of Logical Reasoning. At around 25 questions per section, that's about 500 LSAT questions explained altogether. Not only do these explain why the right answer is right, but they also discuss why each wrong answer is wrong.

If you're concerned that all these explanations will be too heavy to carry around, keep in mind that you can print and just carry a few sections worth of explanations with you, rather than carrying the entire book at once. You can also just keep them on your computer and open the PDF as needed.

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At the moment, Complete Logical Reasoning Explanations for PrepTests 19-28 is only $29.97. That's less than $3 per exam explained and less than $1.50 per section explained, and you get one 263-page PDF with all the explanations.

Enjoy!

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For free, you can download the explanations for the 1st Logical Reasoning section of PrepTest 29 (October 1999 LSAT) (PDF) to get a sense of what these are like.

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Please note:

-In order to benefit from these, you must separately get the Logical Reasoning questions contained within LSAT PrepTests 19-28 - the LSAT exams from June 1996 - June 1999. This download does not include the actual LSAT Logical Reasoning questions from these exams.

-The explanations assume that you already have some familiarity with the basics of Logical Reasoning and its various question-types already. They assume you're not starting from scratch with your LSAT prep.

-This is a PDF available for instant download after submitting payment via PayPal. Download Adobe Acrobat Reader at http://get.adobe.com/reader/ and ensure that your copy of this software is up to date.

-If you're already registered with PayPal, the instant download link will be sent to your PayPal email address. Otherwise, it'll be sent to whichever email address you submit.

-Due to the nature of digital downloads, LSAT Blog cannot offer any refunds. All sales are final.

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Logic and Games

* Done with the LSAT for good? Here's how one guy got rid of his prep books. [YouTube]

* The State Bar of Wisconsin co-sponsors a resolution to promote fair accommodations for disabled LSAT-takers. [Wisconsin Bar]

* A kidnapper sues his former hostages for breach of contract. [Above The Law]

* Chick-Fil-A sues kid for selling t-shirts with the message "Eat More Kale." [Gawker]

* Amazon may finally start charging sales tax next year nationwide. [WSJ Law Blog]

* Ever wonder how landlords figure out what to charge in rent? Computers. [NYTimes]


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December 2, 2011

December 2011 LSAT Score Release Dates

LSAT Blog  December 2011 LSAT Score Release Dates
UPDATE:
LSAC began releasing December 2011 LSAT scores on Wednesday, January 4th, beginning around 5:30PM Eastern. Scores are released in batches, and it may take several hours for everyone to receive their scores.

Good luck!

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The December 2011 LSAT scores / results are scheduled to be released via email by Friday, January 6, 2012.

However, the scores consistently come out more than a few days before the scheduled score release date.

Let's look at the trend over the past several years (click to enlarge):







As you can see, there's a general trend - LSAC is taking longer and longer to come back with the results. Also, the difference between the scheduled score release dates and actual score release dates is decreasing over time.

Unfortunately, it's extremely difficult to predict a specific date, or even a few dates, that would be the most likely actual score release date for the December 2011 LSAT.

My best guess is that December 2011 LSAT scores will be released sometime close to Saturday, December 31st - within a few days before or after.

"But at what time specifically? I need to know when to constantly refresh my email / LSAC account!"

In batches over the course of several hours. Likely starting late in the day (Eastern Time).

No one knows how the batches are organized, if at all.

The batches do not seem to be organized in any of these ways:

alphabetical/regional/high-to-low scores/low-to-high scores/test center #, etc.

Wish everyone all the best!

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See other LSAT score release dates posts.

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While you're waiting for your score, get busy with my admissions-related blog posts.

Also see, Should You to Cancel Your LSAT Score?

Feel free to leave comments and vent at the injustice of having to wait so long for what is rightfully yours.
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December 2011 LSAT Curve: PrepTest 65

December 2011 LSAT Curve PrepTest 65Good luck to everyone taking the December 2011 LSAT!

Did you know that December exams tend to have most lenient curves?

The "curve" on the most recent December exams was very generous. The December 2009 and December 2010 LSATs each allowed you to have 14 incorrect answers but still get a 170. (The average for December exams in recent years prior was only 11.375 incorrect answers).

The below chart contains recent data regarding the number of questions you could get wrong on recent exams and still achieve a particular scaled score (out of 180):

LSAT Blog December Curve Comparison Averages 2002-2009






(See what it's taken to get an LSAT score of 160 or 170 on all LSAT PrepTests.)

Come back to this blog post after you take the LSAT and post your curve predictions in the comments!

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LSAT Test Day Food Recommendations

LSAT Blog Test Day Food RecommendationsAn LSAT distance tutoring student of mine recently emailed me:

"Any tips on what to eat for breakfast the morning of the LSAT? I know you say to have a big breakfast, but what? And what do you suggest for the break and to drink?"

At least one of the items pictured above is not part of a healthy LSAT breakfast.

If you guessed FourLoko, you're on your way to a top LSAT score. Congrats!

(McDonald's probably isn't part of any healthy breakfast, but there's a reason I didn't go to medical school.)

More about food in a bit, but first, coffee and cigarettes (breakfast of champions?).

I've already gone over whether coffee, cigarettes, and gum are allowed on Test Day. Now, the question remains, should you drink coffee or have cigarettes in the morning before the exam?

Answer: Do whatever you normally do. If you normally have coffee or cigarettes in the morning, don't try to go cold turkey now or you'll almost certainly find yourself with a pounding headache.

I don't know why you'd suddenly take up smoking, but now's not the time to start (if there ever was). Coffee will probably empty your intestines in the middle of the exam if you haven't had it in a while, so it's probably not a good idea for folks new to it.

You want to be fully alert, so a pre-test wake and bake isn't a good idea. What you do after the test is up to you (assuming it's for medicinal purposes, of course). Maybe California will vote to legalize next time, folks.

LSAT Blog Oatmeal
Oatmeal with bananas, raisins, or cranberries is probably about as healthy as it gets, while mild enough that it shouldn't give you any stomach issues. Eat it well before the exam starts so that you'll have time to go to the bathroom (oatmeal has lots of fiber).


LSAT Blog Yogurt Granola
Perhaps I misspoke - yogurt and granola might top oatmeal and fruit for "healthiest breakfast of the year." Again, it's mild and has carbs, but unlike oatmeal, yogurt has lots of protein as well. (Perhaps the nutritionists can chime in with their recommendations.)


LSAT Blog Raw EggsEggs have a lot of protein. However, depending upon how you cook them, you might also end up with lots of fat. Fat can make you sleepy. For this reason, lay off the butter and oil. Consider eating them hard-boiled, perhaps with a little salt for flavor. Alternatively, you can go the Rocky route and drink them raw, but don't blame me if you get salmonella.



Pancakes, waffles, muffins, bagels, cold cereal, etc. are also all good, just make sure you have also some protein.

Cold (or warm) pizza is probably good too (cheese has protein), but this is coming from a guy who sometimes eats leftover burritos for breakfast, so you may not want to listen to me on this one.

The bottom line is that you'll want to eat some carbs to give you energy, and some protein to improve your mental performance.

(This site appears to have some simple, yet comprehensive, nutrition advice. This link on it is also good.)

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LSAT Snacks For During The Break:

Try not to be the guy who brings this:

LSAT Blog Snacks







Here are some more practical alternatives that the proctors will probably allow:

Granola bars: quick to unwrap, easy to eat, sugar

Bananas: quick to peel, easy to eat, sugar

Water: reduces thirst

Juice: reduces thirst, sugar

Coffee will likely be cold by now, but I suppose it's ok if you don't care about that sort of thing.

With all beverages, don't drink too much in order to avoid bathroom breaks. Your test center may have a water fountain, which would eliminate the need to bring a water bottle. Or maybe you're one of those people who's paranoid about tap water or lives in a part of the U.S. / world where the water's unsafe to drink.

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See all LSAT Test Day tips.

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Discuss the best breakfast foods and snacks in the comments. I'm sure that most of you know more about nutrition than I do. If you know something, please comment!
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