Law Schools Want You to Want Them (Ep. 422)
Law school admissions is a competitive game, and schools are wary to admit applicants who are likely to enroll elsewhere. This week, Ben and Nathan examine a tactic that an admissions office may use to gauge an applicant’s interest in their law school. Later, the guys share some tips for overcoming test day anxiety, they evaluate a strategy for the closing minutes of timed sections, and they dig into the Flaw question type in Logical Reasoning.
0:58 - Updating a Personal Statement
Why might a law school invite you to rewrite your personal statement? Nathan and Ben suspect that they’re gauging your interest in their school. The guys remind listeners that lawyers never shy away from extra work if it helps to make their case.
34:48 - Test Day Anxiety
Ben and Nathan share some tips on how to mitigate test day anxiety.
41:41 - Question Timing
LSAT Demon student Lucy suggests a new feature that would show students how much time they spent on each question of a timed section. Nathan and Ben are open to the idea but doubt that such a feature would be as helpful as Lucy thinks.
44:30 - Last Five Minutes
Listener Hanna sees value in another prep company’s “five-minute plan” for when time is running low. Ben and Nathan don’t want a five-minute plan to distract Hanna from her 35-minute plan.
52:11 - Apply Now or After October?
An anonymous listener considers withdrawing from the October LSAT to apply earlier in the cycle. Nathan and Ben offer an alternative: apply next cycle with a better LSAT score.
1:00:38 - Flaw Questions
Ben and Nathan break down two of the most common phrasings for answer choices on Flaw questions.
1:13:51 - Plug and Chug
Nathan and Ben discuss why solving Logic Games is never an either-or decision between opposing methods. Everyone will discover their own best approach, which is often a blend of worlds and “plug and chug.”
1:18:48 - Personal Statement Topic
Ben and Nathan encourage an anonymous listener to focus their personal statement on career successes rather than an early-career layoff.
1:22:32 - Scholarship Estimator
Nathan and Ben explain some of the methodology behind the LSAT Demon Scholarship Estimator.