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The LSAT: Best Study Habits Part Two

 

Here are tips three and four… 

Bad Habit #3:  Not committing to your study schedule.

 You want to be a lawyer.  You WILL be a lawyer.  Don’t be that person who has an achievable dream and throws it away due to lack of effort.  The LSAT is the key to getting into law school (and also a big part of saving a lot of money on law school tuition), so make it a huge priority. 

Summer is upon us; if you’re sane, there are probably a hundred things you’d rather be doing than studying for the LSAT.  However, for the next few months (or however long you have to study), you need to be that kid inside her living room, diligently practicing the violin while forlornly watching her friends play outside on the street.… Read full post

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The Top 3 Mistakes LSAT Test-Takers Will Make Next Year

Navigating that space between excitedly reading John Grisham novels and sitting down for the first time in a 1L Civil Procedure class can be tricky. In order to make that journey a successful one, here are three big mistakes to avoid.

#1: Underestimating the test

So you sailed through college with an impressive GPA at an impressive school thanks to your impressive SAT score? Well so did most of the people taking the LSAT. If you’re figuring that just because you’ve been in the 95th percentile your entire life, you should be in the 95th percentile on the LSAT, it’s time to realize that the competition has stepped up.Read full post

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October LSAT Flash Feedback

Tens of thousands of prospective law school applicants woke up on Sunday morning with a major feeling of relief (and perhaps a small hangover, too… not that we condone it) – the LSAT is done! Oh Yeah! While lots of would-be attorneys are celebrating, we know too that still tens of thousands of future test-takers were asking about the experience, hoping to glean some nuggets of wisdom before they sit down to take the exam in December (or beyond). As you can imagine, here at Kaplan, we’re in the latter camp, always eager to hear those Test Day accounts first hand to pass along to the next generation of JDs.… Read full post

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Law School Applications Made Simple…By The LSAC!

Kaplan is proud to announce a new partnership with JD Oasis! Bookmark them at www.jdoasis.com.

Kaplan is proud to announce a new partnership with JD Oasis! A great online community for students pursuing law school, learn more about them at www.jdoasis.com. Take a look at a recent post from JD Oasis entitled “Law School Stories: The Application Process” detailing the ABC’s of applying to law school via the LSAC.

Seeing as its summer, applications are pretty much done and the last of the waitlist letters are going out in the next few weeks, I thought it’d be a nice day to reflect on the application process.… Read full post

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LSAT LR In-Depth 1: Assumptions

Far be it from me to question the teachings of childhood, but who (besides your parents and every teacher you ever had) said that making an assumption makes a… well, you know… out of “u and me”? Whoever it was surely never sat down to take a nearly four-hour test based overwhelmingly on our ability to spot assumptions! This challenging skill is critical to success on the LSAT, as nearly twenty-five percent of the test involves assumption-based questions, more than any other question type. But doing so is especially tough because we can’t see assumptions on paper- it’s like aiming at an invisible target. (In fact, if the assumption were made visible in the answer choices, it wouldn’t be an assumption at all- it would be a restatement of evidence and, thus, wrong!)

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Overlooked Alternatives in Logical Reasoning

The Logical Reasoning section of the LSAT contains a number of frequently repeated argumentative structures. One of the most common involves an author using the given evidence to reach a definitive conclusion without considering alternative factors. Here’s an example of such an argument:

Last night, I planted a bed of roses in my front yard. This morning, I noticed that the roses had been dug up and spread around the yard. My next-door neighbors have a dog that enjoys digging up flowers, so it must have been their dog that dug up my new roses.

In this argument, the author discovers a possible factor in the flowery destruction: a dog with a penchant for digging up flowers.… Read full post

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Formal LSAT Logic – The Unless Dilemma

Given a statement in “if X, then Y” format, most people are perfectly comfortable writing it down in shorthand (X → Y) and forming the contrapositive (No Y → No X). However, there’s one formal logic keyword that distracts and confuses more test takers than any other: unless.

While some people continually struggle with “if” vs. “only if” (remember, “if” indicates a sufficient condition; “only if” indicates a necessary condition), “unless” is a virtually universal stumper. However, like with any concept on the LSAT, dealing with this issue comes down to understanding it.

To help, let’s use an analogy from the world of politics: Unless you were born in the United States, you cannot become President of the United States.… Read full post

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LSAT Logical Reasoning: Stem or Stimulus – What To Read First

Anyone familiar with Kaplan’s Method for Logical Reasoning knows that we recommend reading the question stem before reading (or untangling, as we like to say) the stimulus. This isn’t just some arbitrary decision; it’s a reasoned recommendation that merits justification.

1. Many people who read the stimulus first will then read the question stem, realize what the question is looking for, and have to read the stimulus a second time to pick up anything they missed. That means reading up to a dozen or more lines of text twice. If you know the question ahead of time, you can read the stimulus just once, gather the information you need, and answer the question in less time.… Read full post

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