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Thinking LSAT

Read It Like You Mean It (Ep. 513)

Thinking LSAT

Nathan Fox and Ben Olson

Education

4.8868 Ratings

🗓️ 30 June 2025

⏱️ 49 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

On this week’s Thinking LSAT, Josh joins Ben to answer questions from students who feel stuck. They explain that plateaus often come from ignoring the core skill tested by the LSAT: “Did you understand what you read?” “Strategies” like skimming passages or completing 10 questions in 10 minutes distract from comprehension. Instead, you unlock the LSAT when you read each sentence carefully and make sure you understand every word.

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1:01 – Be Careful What You Share

Josh and Ben unpack a NYT report on a white nationalist who won an award for a paper on originalism. They focus on a student quoted in the article who lost a job offer after telling a future employer about the interview. Their point: it’s not about politics—employers want to avoid liability and bad press. The same logic applies to law school admissions, where offices will use any self-disclosed information to their advantage.

7:15 – Save My RC

Ellie writes in hoping to “save” her reading comprehension. They urge her to slow down, spend more time digesting each passage, and treat every question as Must Be True—provable solely by the text.

14:50 – Professors’ Letter of Recommendation

When Joshua’s professors ask what to include in letters of recommendation, highlight experiences that prove future lawyer competence—research, writing, leadership, and advocacy. Ensure recommenders understand LSAC’s credential assembly service upload process so letters arrive on time.

19:12 – Retaking Classes

Emma wants to know if she should retake classes to boost her GPA. If your school removes old grades from your transcript, retaking a course can improve your GPA. If not, stack easy A’s instead. Delay graduation if needed to add GPA-boosting coursework, and consider a gap year to raise numbers further—every decimal point can translate into larger scholarships.

LSAT Demon Scholarship Estimator

24:44 – Plateauing in Scores

The guys diagnose Sydney’s stall, where she was missing seven questions per section. She’s fixated on speed. Strategies like “10 questions in 10 minutes” detract from accuracy and understanding. Instead, Josh and Ben prescribe concentrating on accuracy, ditching box-checking wrong-answer journals, and digging into the logic of each missed question instead of types. 

37:56 – Applying Early Decision

Applying early decision is a scholarship-killer. You surrender negotiation leverage and forfeit the chance to apply broadly and early elsewhere. Keep your options—and bargaining power—open.

42:46 - Word of the Week - Nimrod

“In Wisconsin, as I was driving through, a hunter shot his own guide between the shoulder blades. The coroner questioning this nimrod asked, ‘Did you think he was a deer?’”

Get caught up with our ⁠Word of the Week⁠⁠ library. 

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

The test is testing your ability to read and comprehend individual sentences, and that has

0:08.1

nothing to do with the question.

0:14.0

Hello and welcome to episode 513 of the Thinking Elsaft podcast. I'm Ben Olson, one of the founders of ElsaDemon and the ElsaDemon Daily podcast. With me is Josh Mansfield, teacher here with the demon. Anything else we should say about you? Josh, you're also the producer of this show now. Yeah, I've been interim. I'm not sure. So I just, I stick with teacher. I feel

0:40.0

like it's the safest. But I feel like I've graduated. I've gone from the Demon Dailies to the

0:45.0

thinking else at now. So yeah, this is the big leagues, right, Ben? Yeah, this is. I meant well.

0:52.1

It's big for us. Yeah. That's right. That's right.

0:56.1

Okay, cool. And then you're going to law school in the fall, so that's exciting.

1:00.6

And great. Well, thanks, Josh. Thanks for joining today. I don't know where Nate is, but he is off today and probably, hopefully, having fun.

1:10.1

Let's jump into this first item. So recently the New York

1:13.6

Times reported about a law student who won an award for a racist article. The title of this

1:25.5

article in the New York Times is a white nationalist wrote a law school

1:29.1

paper promoting racist views. It won him an award. The point of bringing this up is not so much

1:37.7

to talk about this white nationalist or the paper that won him an award,

1:44.8

uh, it's more to talk about some of the things that happened to students who,

1:51.1

you know,

1:51.7

were asked about this and the consequences of that.

1:55.1

That said,

1:55.4

do you want to say anything else about this paper or I guess,

1:58.2

no,

1:58.6

I mean,

1:58.9

it's,

1:59.7

it's a pretty crazy article. We'll link it in the show notes so make

...

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