by rinagoldfield Tue Aug 06, 2013 2:11 pm
Hi e.sterlingsmith,
I generally recommend that students begin their studies by focusing on accuracy and ignoring timing. However, this only makes sense in the period when students are just getting familiar with LSAT strategies. Once students begin to feel familiar with good strategies, they should start thinking about timing, since timing is SUCH a big factor on this test.
You’ve already taken an LSAT prep class, so you should be at least somewhat familiar with good LSAT strategies. For that reason, I think you should time yourself on problems. Once you’ve done the problems timed, however, go back through them untimed and really consider the details of what makes the right answers right and the wrong answers wrong.
The practice sets aren’t meant to be mock sections. Don’t time them like sections, since they’re drills rather than mixed reviews.
Give yourself 1:20 for individual LR questions (maybe 1:30 for really long ones). If you want to do a couple of questions in a row without a break, just multiply the number of questions you want to do by 1:20.
Try doing full games in 8:45. Same for full passages.
Hope that helps!