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3 answers

Aside from the time actually spent during a LSAT prep course, I probably did about 6 hours a week during the class. Honestly, that's not enough. I shoulda done more. I studied before actually starting the prep course though. No idea how much that was, but it got me off to a running start when I actually took the prep course. I had taken my first practice LSAT my freshman year of college so I'd been kind of preparing ever since then.

2007-02-28 06:04:08 · answer #1 · answered by Linkin 7 · 0 0

None, but then I didn't take it either. However, as I understand it, it equates to the GRE (Graduate Record Exam) for people not going to law school. I didn't study for my GRE and did well enough to qualify for MENSA. However, I was lucky that my older sister told me to take the GRE while I was still in school. Had I waited, I might not have done as well. She waited about 5 years after graduation and didn't do as well as she should have because she was no longer in the habit of taking tests. Her scores were high enough for graduate school at the college where she got her B.A., but might not have been good enough to get her into another graduate school.

2007-02-27 19:52:22 · answer #2 · answered by Lillian L 5 · 0 2

None.

2007-02-27 19:27:52 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

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