Why We Don't Take Notes (Ep. 474)

Ben Olson's headshot.
Ben
Nathan Fox's headshot.
Nathan

Many LSAT students believe that taking notes is critical to active reading. Nathan and Ben disagree. This week, the guys encourage listeners to drop their note-taking crutches and to engage with the LSAT on a more immediate level. Later, they discuss one-on-one LSAT tutoring, score cancellation, and falling URM enrollment at Harvard Law School.

Study with our Free Plan

Download our iOS app

Watch Episode 474 on YouTube

1:31 - Downward Trend

Ben and Nathan provide a simple fix for falling scores: do fewer questions. The guys also instruct listener Nicole to avoid overanalyzing her performance on specific question types.

10:36 - Taking Notes

Nathan and Ben explain why note-taking can be counterproductive on the LSAT.

16:43 - Pearls vs. Turds

When taking practice tests, is it OK to flag questions to review later?

25:53 - One-on-One Tutoring

Ben and Nathan discuss what a focused and productive LSAT tutoring session looks like.

33:47 - Scheduling Your Attempts

When you’re happy with your practice test scores, take each successive LSAT until you’re happy with your official score. There’s no need to space out your official attempts.

46:16 - Undergraduate Transcripts

Listener Alex considers excluding a community college transcript from their law school applications. Nathan and Ben urge Alex to disclose all information required by the Credential Assembly Service.

52:07 - Score Cancellation

In almost all cases, Ben and Nathan advise students not to cancel an official LSAT score. But listener Emma might be the exception to the rule.

55:37 - URM Enrollment

The Harvard Crimson reports that enrollment of students of color has dropped eight percent at Harvard Law School.

1:00:13 - Word of the Week

Law schools often arrogate prestige.