Blind Review Strategy

Listener Mike thanks the guys for their advice on how to review effectively and avoid burnout (episode 216 [https://www.thinkinglsat.com/demon-daily-episodes/episode-216]). Nathan and Ben list six questions that you should always ask yourself when blind-reviewing a question.…

Interpreting Your Diagnostic Test

Congratulations, you’ve completed your first practice LSAT. There are 90-something more of them available. Most students will do at least 10 tests before they’re ready for their first crack at the real thing. (Many students will do 20 tests, or 40 tests, or more.) You’ve dipped your…

The LSAT Is in Two Days, OMFG

Just kidding. Some of you will take the LSAT in a couple of days. Some of you won’t. No one should suffer heart palpitations either way. If you’re not taking the official test this week, you should be doing your regularly scheduled drilling, timed practice sections…

One-Hour LSAT

One hour per day is enough to beat the LSAT, if you invest each hour wisely. I invite you to get moving in the right direction with the following schedule. If you have more than an hour, use the following as your foundation. Here’s how you should spend your…

Timing Is Everything… But Not What You Think

This week, I want to talk about timing. New students always ask me when they should start doing timed sections and timed practice tests—should they study for a week before their first timed test? A month? Six months? None of the above. All students…