Attack Each Argument (Ep. 493)

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

You don’t conquer the LSAT with fifty-fifty guesses. You do it by carefully solving each question. This week, Nathan and Ben outline their plan of attack in Logical Reasoning, counsel a student who’s feeling unmotivated to study, and identify a common cause of score plateaus.

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1:33 - Staying Motivated

An anonymous listener struggles to stay motivated for LSAT study. Nathan and Ben recommend prioritizing quality over quantity and pursuing activities outside of LSAT prep.

7:45 - Don’t Apply Late

Law schools’ application deadlines shouldn’t be on your radar. To maximize your chances, apply early and broadly.

16:45 - Attack Each Argument

The vast majority of arguments in Logical Reasoning are bad. Excellence in LR comes from attacking each argument and finding flaws.

32:31 - Gap-Year Employment

Any work experience can be good work experience. Law schools won’t look down on you for putting a retail job on your résumé.

36:10 - Timed Sections vs. Practice Tests

Do your scores from individual timed sections accurately reflect how you’d perform on the official test?

38:49 - Score Plateau

The guys diagnose the cause of listener Daniel’s score plateau: poor accuracy. They instruct Daniel to slow down and practice getting questions right.

44:16 - Thirsty Law Schools

The University of Tulsa College of Law is offering unsolicited full-ride scholarships to students with LSAT scores at or above 160.

53:55 - Word of the Week

Law students must master the punctilio of legal writing.