- To find an appropriate point to balance accuracy and speed; at least to me, my experience has told me that to rush into things will often reduce the accuracy, and to leave a few questions unfinished/guessed usually boost my accuracy for those answered.
- To know what articles you are and are not comforable with; I usually take a quick peek at the first sentence of each article, if find an article I don't like, then find out how many questions it has, if it happens to have the least questions, I'll leave this in the end, because I want my time spent worthwhile on those I am more comfortable with and have a larger chance to achieve a higher score.
- Don't waste time on hard questions, in most cases, at least 1 question in each article where I will spend longer time struggling between 2 choices, I learn to take a guess, and leave more time on the rest of the section.
- Develop a habit of reading something everyday, dedicate 20-30 minutes, especially the areas you lack the knowledge and interest, they could be LSAT reading articles, newspaper, journals, magazines.
- Grasp the main idea of the article within the first round reading, if not, go back to the article until you are sure about it; misintepretation of the main idea could possibly impact your understanding of a few questions, if not all. |