Quote:
Originally Posted by Titan
So, Don't Do It, is proably not what you are looking for eh?
The one comment I would have is make sure the test questions you are studying are actual LSAT questions. I know some of the test preps have LSAT "like" questions and are not great quality. Don't practice what you are not going to do.
I did the old exams from the actual LSAT test prep.
One final tip is to do practice exams under the same conditions as you would do the test. For example on a couple of saturdays set aside 3 hours and do the test under the same time restraints.
Aaron Renert was a grad of the U of C in about 1998 and also runs the Renert tutoring you may see around town. Don't think he is practicing.
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He was actually my landlord when I was in first year of law school by a strange coincidence. He's a pretty good guy, but I can't say anything about his courses (I'm one of those people who wrote two or three practice tests and filpped through an LSAT strategy book, but didn't get into any sort of formal training or schedule anything rigorous but had the highest LSAT score in my class. For me, I think it was one of those things where a practice test or two told me that I could achieve what looked to be really good scores without having to put too much prep work in so I didn't want to make myself nervous by over-prepping).
I know Aaron was practicing out of his home for a while, but not sure if he still is.