4.8 • 868 Ratings
🗓️ 6 March 2023
⏱️ 67 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
LSAT Demon acolytes know that we slow down to speed up on the LSAT. But this mantra is not an invitation to focus on speed. Slowing down is not an end in itself, nor is it sufficient for LSAT mastery. On this week’s episode, Ben and Nathan remind listeners why we slow down: to better engage with the passage so we can make predictions and dismiss wrong answers quickly. Later, the guys tell a listener to stop planning applications while still in school. They shoot down a strategy to combat LR “brain fog.” And they assess claims of a prestigious university’s discrimination against applicants with mental health issues.
0:00 - Upcoming events - Nathan and Ben promote two upcoming events: their free class for parents of LSAT students and an LSAT Demon meetup at the New York LSAC Law School Forum.
6:06 - Slowing Down - Since he began slowing down on his practice tests, listener David has increased his accuracy—but not his scores. Ben and Nathan assure David that speed will come naturally as he learns to make good predictions and dismiss wrong answers quickly.
14:47 - Stop Making Plans - Nathan and Ben advise an anonymous undergraduate student not to let thoughts of law school be a distraction. Anonymous should focus on their grades and plan their applications later.
27:41 - Practice-Test Anxiety - Madison scores lower on full practice tests than on individual timed sections. Is test anxiety to blame? The guys suspect that Madison might be falling into a common trap: worrying about the whole test when she should be focusing on one question at a time.
33:46 - Pearls vs. Turds - An anonymous student proposes a dubious strategy for dealing with “brain fog” at the end of Logical Reasoning sections: do the first half of the section, then jump to the end and work backwards.
41:14 - Mental Health Discrimination - Nathan and Ben review an essay by a former Cornell faculty member who claims that the school discriminates against applicants with mental health issues. The guys suspect that some law school admissions officers may be similarly biased.
50:07 - Withdrawing Applications - The guys advise listener Brayden on how to withdraw applications.
53:10 - Should I Take the April LSAT? - Perry isn’t sure that he’ll be fully prepared for the April test. Should he still take it to max out his attempts before the fall? Ben and Nathan see both sides of the argument, but they think that Perry might want to keep a final attempt available for next year.
56:58 - Scores Decreasing - Nathan and Ben assure an anonymous student that score fluctuations are just part of the process. Anonymous should stop worrying about their scores and focus on understanding the questions they get wrong. The guys also tell Anonymous that reading more slowly in RC isn’t enough: they’ve got to find a way to care about the passage.
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0:00.0 | Hello and welcome to episode 392 of the Thinking Elsap podcast. |
0:12.0 | I'm Ben Olson with me is Nathan Fox. |
0:14.6 | We're the co-founder of Elsat Demon.com |
0:17.4 | and the Elsat Demon Daily Podcast. |
0:19.2 | If you want to be Elsat Famous, |
0:21.4 | you can share news and ask questions on our website that's thinking |
0:24.2 | Elsat.com. This is gonna air on Monday March 6th. A few days later |
0:29.3 | Nathan you're gonna be doing a free class oh I'm I'm going to be there as well. This is the parents night. |
0:34.4 | Yeah. Yeah. So this is Thursday, March 9th, 4 PM Pacific, 7 PM Eastern. |
0:41.4 | If you have any parent who doesn't understand this process, which I'm assuming is going to |
0:47.8 | apply to most of you, and they're interested in your law school journey, please have them come to this class. They can sign up at |
0:55.2 | Elsat.link. |
0:56.8 | Nathan, but both of us will be there and we're going to explain exactly how you can go to law school for free. |
1:05.0 | You know, I think it's a nice thing you can do for your parents, |
1:07.6 | potentially. |
1:08.7 | Like, I don't know, if you're like me, |
1:11.0 | you might struggle sometimes to connect to your family and you know |
1:17.6 | there your folks I'm sure they want to be proud of you and this is an opportunity for them to, you know, be involved in you going to law school. |
1:28.0 | And yeah, they're going to learn a lot of stuff about the process. |
1:32.0 | You might both learn stuff about the process that you don't currently know |
1:36.8 | namely I mean most importantly I think we're going to talk about two things |
1:42.0 | the LSATs just huge importance in law school admissions and to the |
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