Study Habits That Won’t Help on the LSAT 

Practicing Only When Conditions Are Perfect -  If you practice for the LSAT only when you feel like it, you won’t practice enough. It’s more important to practice consistently than to practice with ideal conditions. 

Rely on memorization -  The LSAT tests skills rather than material. Students may benefit from remembering a few things: common logical fallacies, formulas for contraception, or pointers to conditional reasoning. 

No Stacks of Flashcards -  On the bright side, this means no stacks of flashcards. The only way to get better at the LSAT is to practice taking the LSAT. However, the practice also has limitations. 

Continuous drilling -  All this proves that the kind of person who dedicated hundreds of hours to practice the test is also the kind of person who brags about it to strangers on the internet. 

Marking wrong answers is enough -  You need to know why you got those questions wrong and how to avoid repeating the same mistakes. 

Pay Attention to Practice Test  Scores -  If you struggle to complete a whole section of reading comprehension on the LSAT, don't just try to work fast. Try new techniques to see what helps. 

Neglecting Timed or Untimed  Practice -  Once you are confident in your skills, introduce timed section practice. The element of time pressure helps you perform faster and stay focused. 

Spending Practice Time Not Practicing -  Before a practice LSAT, a logic puzzle or brain teaser can keep your brain limber. But don't confuse warm-ups for actual practice. 

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