Reddit Reddit reviews 10 Actual, Official LSAT PrepTests Volume VI: (PrepTests 72–81)

We found 11 Reddit comments about 10 Actual, Official LSAT PrepTests Volume VI: (PrepTests 72–81). Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

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10 Actual, Official LSAT PrepTests Volume VI: (PrepTests 72–81)
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11 Reddit comments about 10 Actual, Official LSAT PrepTests Volume VI: (PrepTests 72–81):

u/mostlyLSAT · 7 pointsr/LSAT

They are cheapest if you buy the books of ten instead of single preptests. The titles are a little confusing, so check to see which test numbers are included. Here are the three most recent (and most relevant):

Preptests 72-81

Preptests 62-71

Preptests 52-61

u/fearlessrhubarb · 7 pointsr/LSAT

Here is the amazon link for 72-81:

10 Actual Official LSAT PrepTests 72-81

The rest can be purchased individually on amazon for about 8 dollars each.

u/GooseDown_and_Tweed · 4 pointsr/lawschooladmissions

The LSAT is carefully designed to determine which minds can succeed in law school. Start by taking a timed full exam on your own at home (it's called a "diagnostic") and seeing how well you do. Follow these two links...
https://www.amazon.com/10-Actual-Official-LSAT-PrepTests/dp/0998339784/
/r/LSAT
...And check the admitted applicant profiles for the universities you're interested in.

u/JonDenningPowerScore · 2 pointsr/LSAT

Great questions!

The Self Study package doesn't include any practice test books, but does include copies of our Type Training material which are 20 tests' worth of questions grouped by concept/type. So if you bought the three Type Training books for LR, LG, and RC for PTs 1-20, say, you'd have every question from those exams, although not in individual test form: instead those collections are designed to allow people to focus intensively on singular ideas, like Weaken questions or Science passages or Advanced Linear games, so that you can really drill down on the specific areas giving you trouble. So they're real questions from tests, but not great for taking as full tests, if that makes sense.

Instead, your best bet is to purchase the deeply-discounted (relative to single tests) 10 Actual books that LSAC has released. If you get the two latest editions of those you'll have 20 very recent exams in full, and that'll run you about $45 or so on amazon last I checked. That's far and away the cheapest and easiest manner to buy real tests.

Then our plans themselves reference tests from those collections directly as recommended PTs to take at specified times. We even go so far as to tell which tests to use for the experimental section on five-section PTs! So it's all very clear and orderly once you're in the thick of things :)

Finally, the Workbooks were all designed to correspond exactly with the Bibles, so each Bible chapter will have a supplemental Workbook section devoted to it with tons of drills and exercises and examples to help you perfect the approaches advocated in the Bibles. And again the Study Plans are extremely detailed in how they instruct you to move through the various resource and combine them for maximum effect. It feels like a lot upfront but once you begin working through it with a Plan in hand it starts to fly by...or at least it seems to move more quickly/efficiently than people expect given the volume!

u/goodcleanchristianfu · 2 pointsr/neoliberal

Thanks! Honestly I practiced exclusively for the logic games section. I gave up on studying for the other sections within a week of buying my first practice book - just drill them like you've never drilled anything before, so that you don't get the 'wait, how can I diagram this?' shock that can kill you from the starting gate when approaching a problem. I didn't have a particularly sophisticated routine to study with, frankly that was it - I'd strongly recommend the published LSATs as your main if not exclusive resource once you've had a basic introduction to diagramming (this was mine,) but would be happy to answer any further questions.

u/DJ_Flowsnake · 2 pointsr/Advice

Hell yeah brother. Rising 2L here. Started practice tests getting a 145, first real test 155 and second test 161

Different people will tell you different things. Some people work well with courses others with tutors others with books. Taking a logic course in college helped me study as well.

The advice I was given: take as many practice tests as possible. Like 25 is where you become the most effective. By 25 tests you get the lay of the land and the question types and can anticipate patterns.

Links for books with past test here

10 Actual, Official LSAT PrepTests Volume VI: (PrepTests 72–81) https://www.amazon.com/dp/0998339784/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_rNH7CbS8G3Q30

I found the LSAT powerscore study bible also helpful brand of books. Link to those here

The PowerScore LSAT Bible Trilogy https://www.amazon.com/dp/0990893405/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_.NH7CbKEDHM6J

Finally, where you can always improve your score the most is the game section. BEFORE you take any practice test, make 4 of 5 copies of the games section of the test. Do a Timed cold run through. Then once you are finished, go through it. Go on the site 7 sage, they are good for games and other things, also have a good YouTube channel (link below). Watch how he does it, then try it again. Fail and then watch him again and try on another copy. Get them wrong and then try again. Do this until you can go through and get everyone right. By doing it multiple times you get the games down pact and can move through them Quickly.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=gorK9SLc2as

Good luck kid. I found the LSAT immensely frustrating. You eventually hit a wall where improvement becomes difficult. Keep grinding and you will get there. PM how you do, and where you end up going

r/lawschooladmissions is cool group but veryyy discouraging tbh. Take your time be confident but apply yourself. Good luck

u/jordanschwartz93 · 1 pointr/LSAT
u/IRAn00b · 1 pointr/LSAT

Amazon and Barnes and Noble both say October 4th.


u/Calloquialism · 1 pointr/LSAT

I had no problems with ordering them.

Here's a link to one. Just look for the author Law School Admissions Council to be sure.

u/asmallsoftvoice · 0 pointsr/LSAT

I only did this in the last week, but Khan Academy also gives you some free full digital tests. Maybe get a book of practice tests, but if you have to work like I did you probably won't get as many in as many other people here. I found it helpful to write down the numbers of the answers I got wrong per section and then blind review/reanswer just the ones I got wrong to try to understand where I messed up. If you have a section you know you are satisfied with (I'm no 170+, so I was happy to only get 2-4 wrong on LR, so focused on LG) then do more of those sections than full tests, unless you have time for full tests.