
If you do nothing else, do these five things:
1. Take a diagnostic. Use LSAC LawHub. Know your baseline before studying anything.
2. Master conditional logic. If/then, contrapositives, chains. This skill appears in EVERY section. It's the foundation of LSAT thinking.
3. Drill Logic Games obsessively. This is the most improvable section. Students go from -15 to -2. Redo games you've already done until the setup is automatic.
4. Learn to identify argument structure. Conclusion, premises, assumptions. Do this for every LR question until it's instant.
5. Use Blind Review. Take timed sections, then review untimed. The gap between your scores reveals exactly what to fix.
The LSAT is the most learnable standardized test. It tests skills, not knowledge. Those skills can be trained. 3-6 months of consistent practice can change your legal career. Start now.
Reference:
TaskLoco™ — The Sticky Note GOAT