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I'm scheduled to take the LSAT in June and I'm planning on signing up for a preparation course. I've done a lot of research and narrowed it down to Kaplan's, Princeton Review's, and Testmasters. I'm looking to spend at most $1500. I'm looking for opinions based on experience on which one I should use. I've never taken the test. I currently have my master's degree. My undergrad g.p.a. was 3.0 and my master's a 4.0. Any advice would greatly be appreciated. Thanks!

2007-02-09 00:21:12 · 2 answers · asked by Jeremy B 2 in Education & Reference Higher Education (University +)

2 answers

Based on experience, they're all about the same. It's more about how much you put into it than anything else. I was the president of a pre-law club that was sponsored by two of the companies you mentioned. Very familiar with them and knew lots of people who took them. Knew people who took the third one too. All that has lead me to decide that they're pretty much all the same. No one stands out.

2007-02-09 04:30:15 · answer #1 · answered by Linkin 7 · 0 0

I prepared for the LSAT and wound up missing only one question on the entire test. If I can do it, you can, too. (And my GPA was just below yours, so it looks like you're smarter.) Note: I didn't like practicing law.

Any program will work, as long as you apply yourself and make sure you truly understand the concepts required for the test. The nice thing about Princeton Review or Kaplan (I taught for them years ago) is that you are attending classes with a live instructor. This forces you to devote the time and allows you to ask questions to a live person. But any program, including books you get at the store, will work as long as you are disciplined, apply yourself, and practice.

2007-02-09 00:33:26 · answer #2 · answered by CJKatl 4 · 1 0

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