Retake and Reapply (Ep. 436)

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Many applicants face a dilemma at this point in the admissions cycle: Do they settle for a mediocre LSAT score and uninspiring scholarship offers? Or do they retake the LSAT and reapply next year? To Ben and Nathan, the choice is clear. There’s too much upside and too little downside not to take the long-term approach. Later, the guys explain why common sense trumps formal logic on the LSAT. They speculate that the LSAT will soon increase in difficulty. And they discuss the proper use of law school rankings.

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1:45 - How to Start Studying

After a five-year break from the LSAT, listener Ellen asks how to restart her studies. Nathan and Ben answer simply: begin with one question.

5:26 - Retake and Reapply

Listener Dale believes that he can improve upon his official 166, but he fears that his parents won't support his decision to retake and reapply next cycle. Ben and Nathan recommend patience. The beginning of your legal career is too important to rush.

16:22 - Formal Logic

The guys assure listener Alexis that the LSAT requires no knowledge of formal logic. It just takes common sense. For more, watch LSAT Demon Daily, Ep. 384: Formal Logic.

23:31 - No Gimmicks

An LSAT Demon student seeks time-saving strategies based on trends in correct-answer distribution for certain question types. The problem? Those trends don’t exist.

31:40 - Will the LSAT Get Harder?

Nathan and Ben suspect that the LSAT may soon become more difficult—but not because the Logic Games are going away.

38:05 - Law School Rankings

Ben and Nathan suggest that applicants use law school rankings to help build a list of target schools, not to decide which school to attend.

49:00 - Success Story

A proud dad thanks the LSAT Demon team for helping his family save $250,000.

53:23 - Don’t Go to Law School Unless…

The guys congratulate LSAT Demon student Alex for deciding not to go to law school.

58:44 - Words of the Week

Those who recoil from new words may find their antipathy to vocabulary inimical to the inauguration of a legal career.