What do you wish you knew before starting your LSAT prep?

With almost everything in life, making mistakes is the best - and sometimes ONLY - way to learn. Failing at something helps you learn from your mistakes when you try again later.

Sometimes, though, that kinda motivational stuff is just as frustrating as the failures themselves!

Reading that kind of stuff drove me crazy when I was going through the worst year of my life -

***a year of studying for the LSAT***


Yes, that's right. It took a while before I was able to admit it...


but it took me a damn YEAR to study for this freakin' test!


Thankfully, *you* don’t need to fail at the LSAT to succeed at it later - you can take advice from past students and use their words of wisdom to ace the exam.

I asked a bunch of students this question a while ago:


What do you wish you knew before starting your LSAT prep?


I was floored by the response - got a TON of great answers that are sure to help you as you prep for the LSAT.


But if you don’t succeed at first, then you're just like I was - getting scores nowhere NEAR my goal score. And I'm not the only one like that.

So I've gotten hundreds of success stories to share their stories in LSAT Diaries.



Many of them share how they went from super-low scores, struggled, then managed to achieve high scores. (Like Jared, a retaker who started with a random prep book.)

Because, unless you're an LSAT genius (most people aren't), sometimes you need to go low before reaching the heights.

Believe me, I know.

- Steve


P.S. If you have a burning question I haven't answered yet, lemme know and I'll do my best to help you!


Recommended Resources:

1. LSAT Courses
The best of my LSAT material with exclusive access to attend my Live Online LSAT Master Classes + Q&As, and on-demand video lessons you can watch anytime. Plus, LSAT study plans to keep you on track. Save hundreds of dollars with an LSAT course package.

2. LSAT Day-By-Day Study Plans
Preparing for the LSAT is confusing. There are dozens of prep books and practice tests out there, and 1,000+ articles on my website alone. When, and how, should you use them all? These super-specific study plans give you a clear plan of attack.

3. LSAT Checklists
All the little items and details students don't usually think of. They hold you accountable and help you make sure you're not missing anything.







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