LSAT Work-Life Balance (Ep. 423)
One high-quality hour of study per day is all you need to beat the LSAT. Still, many students struggle to commit. This week, Nathan and Ben prompt listeners to prioritize and make time for the LSAT. Later, the guys question whether undergraduate GPA inflation is making law school admissions more competitive. They examine scholarships for in-state applicants. And they break down how to approach an LSAT question when all the answer choices seem terrible.
2:28 - September LSAT Scores
Ben and Nathan give props to LSAT Demon students who crushed the September LSAT.
12:30 - Two Practice Tests per Day?
Nathan and Ben question whether an anonymous listener’s extreme study schedule produces a placebo effect.
21:30 - Testing Center Procedures
Listener Serena shares news that in-person test takers may not use their own writing instruments. All scratch paper and pencils will be provided by Prometric.
25:02 - Work-Life Balance
Listener Imani struggles to find time to study after a demanding day at work. The guys advise Imani to reconsider her priorities.
34:22 - GPA Inflation
Ben and Nathan assess Daisy's concerns about GPA inflation at top law schools. They recommend against writing a GPA addendum.
44:52 - Low GPA Admissions Chances
Nathan and Ben assure listener Andres that a good LSAT score could earn him scholarship offers from regional law schools despite his low GPA.
49:57 - In-State Disadvantage
Evidence and common sense suggest that law schools give bigger scholarships to out-of-state applicants.
54:31 - Picking the Least Bad Answer
Listener Sara asks how to find the correct answer when all options seem bad. Ben and Nathan push Sara to understand precisely what differentiates the answer choices.