LSAT Study Plans and Speeding Up on Timed Exams


How should someone come up with a study plan for the LSAT?

I recommend a five-step approach to LSAT studying -- the LASER approach - it's the framework underlying my day-by-day LSAT study plans and courses. (I also offer free week-by-week LSAT study plans following the same structure).

LASER is an acronym that stands for learning, accuracy, sections, exams, and review.

L is for learning theory. 
A is for accuracy, doing individual questions by type, drilling them untimed to get used to what each type is asking for.
S is for sections -- doing individual timed 35- minute sections at your own pace. 
E is for endurance and exams.
R is for review.

If any of these five steps is missing from your prep, that will hold you back, and you need to slow down to focus on the missing piece. 


How To Speed Up On Timed LSAT Practice Exams

Ok, so maybe trying to get faster on a timed LSAT section wouldn’t be the most compelling movie, but it would be better than Speed 2. That film was a giant flaming ball of crap.

I would much rather watch someone blow through an LSAT Logic Games section than Sandra Bullock and whoever replaced Keanu Reeves run around for two hours on a cruise ship going kinda fast

But I digress.

The bottom line is untimed practice tests will only get you so far. You gotta practice for the real thing so you don’t make simple mistakes just because the clock is stressing you out.

In this article, I’ll give you some tips and tricks to make sure you make the most of the 35-minutes you’re given in each section.

How To Speed Up On Timed LSAT Practice Exams

Good luck and Godspeed,

LSAT Steve


P.S. #2 sucks, but it might help you!






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