Raise Your LSAT
Score By 5, 10,
20, Even 30
Points!
(Even If You’re Not In The “Genius Club”)
Raise Your LSAT Score By
5, 10, 20, Even 30 Points!
(Even If You’re Not In The “Genius Club”)
From a guy who catapulted his results from the 150s to a big fat 175 on the ACTUAL LSAT EXAM… And now has 15 years of experience helping THOUSANDS OF STUDENTS do the same…
Attn: Aspiring Lawyers Everywhere.
When I first decided to go to law school…
…I did what most confident, aspiring attorneys do.
I bought a METRIC TON of LSAT prep books and dug right in.
After all, I’d always been a good student. And I’d taken on the SATs without any outside help (and done very well). Over all, school had always come easy to me — how could this be different?
A few evenings and a weekend or two hitting the books…
…Score in the mid-160s (easily) and call it a day. Right?
Yah, that’s… Uhh…Not how it worked out at all…
Instead I Ended Up Feeling Like A Complete Moron!
(AND SPENT AN ENTIRE YEAR BATTLING THAT STUPID TEST)
Trying my best to stay motivated as I spun my wheels getting nowhere. Coming up short with one embarrassing score after another…
Month after month of torturing myself this way…
…Yet I STILL only got a 152 on my first practice test! Ugh!
So I kept on going (doing the exact same thing)…
What did Einstein say again?
But I kept on taking practice tests…
…And kept on striking out with those embarrassing LSAT scores.
Until I began to despise this exam with every fiber of my being.
Don’t Listen To Anyone Who Tells You That You Can’t Improve Your Scores!
The LSAT completely took over my life for a while, sure…
I barely slept that year as I tried to figure out what I was doing wrong. I struggled to balance studying with term papers, final exams, work, and friends.
(I even wondered whether I should give up on my law school dreams altogether.)
But I struggled on.
And my scores gradually increased from the low 150s to the high 160s. Which was a nice start. But I didn’t stop there. I kept studying until I felt confident about every question. I studied every LSAT book I could get my hands on and every LSAT question ever released.
Missed a lot of parties and a lot of fun, and at times I felt like I barely had a life at all…
Finally something broke…
It didn’t come to me in some lightbulb moment. I didn’t learn it from a tutor or forgotten book I found on a dusty shelf somewhere… Or anyone else I knew who was preparing for the LSAT either. I spent an entire year BANGING MY HEAD AGAINST THE WALL to break through to the other side…BUT
…Piece by piece I began to unlock the techniques, methods, and strategies it would take to crack this test once and for all.
And that’s EXACTLY what I did.
The result?
YES, I ENDED UP GETTING A 175!!!
We’ve now seen students do that in a month!
And we’ve seen others increase final scores by 30 points or more!
Don’t Listen To Anyone Who Tells You That You Can’t Improve Your Scores!
The LSAT completely took over my life for a while, sure…
I barely slept that year as I tried to figure out what I was doing wrong. I struggled to balance studying with term papers, final exams, work, and friends.
(I even wondered whether I should give up on my law school dreams altogether.)
But I struggled on.
And my scores gradually increased from the low 150s to the high 160s. Which was a nice start. But I didn’t stop there. I kept studying until I felt confident about every question. I studied every LSAT book I could get my hands on and every LSAT question ever released.
Missed a lot of parties and a lot of fun, and at times I felt like I barely had a life at all…
Finally something broke…
It didn’t come to me in some lightbulb moment. I didn’t learn it from a tutor or forgotten book I found on a dusty shelf somewhere… Or anyone else I knew who was preparing for the LSAT either. I spent an entire year BANGING MY HEAD AGAINST THE WALL to break through to the other side…BUT
…Piece by piece I began to unlock the techniques, methods, and strategies it would take to crack this test once and for all.
And that’s EXACTLY what I did.
The result?
YES, I ENDED UP GETTING A 175!!!
We’ve now seen students do that in a month!
And we’ve seen others increase final scores by 30 points or more!
Are You Going Mental With This “Stupid Test” Too?
If you’re reading this page right now, I’m guessing that you’re not exactly loving this thing… And let’s be honest, the way they’ve set it up really has NOTHING to do with what it takes to succeed in law school (or have a successful law school career).
So it’s not really fair, is it?
I used to hate, hate, hate the LSAT…
…So if you’ve been searching desperately for a better way to study, I totally get it!
Of course, maybe you’re not in the same position as I was.
Maybe you’re just being proactive here (unlike me). And want to find a better way to study up front (so your bedroom floor doesn’t end up looking like this):
Good!
Because After 15+ Years Coaching Students To Top LSAT Scores I Realize I DIDN’T Have To Go Through That Stress And Self-Punishment…
All the blood, the sweat, the tears I went through in that year of torturing myself…
Looking back on it, I should have saved myself the headache.
90% of the time I spent studying was completely useless!
And I could have gotten that 175 after just a few months of studying! (Instead of a whole entire year).
Imagine setting 3 short months aside for the LSAT and then LEAVING IT BEHIND YOU (and without having to miss out on parties or turn down promising dates).
What was I doing wrong?
You may have heard the name Isaac Newton before.
That brainiac who came up with the fundamental theories of physics?
Isaac Newton’s ideas were based on a lot of complex mathematical formulas. Many of which required CALCULUS.
But there was a problem. Calculus didn’t exist yet! So before he could publish anything about his theory of gravitation, Newton had to invent calculus.
(I could surely think of better things to do with MY time.)
But when I was studying for the LSAT, I convinced myself that, like Isaac Newton, I had to invent my own LSAT system from scratch. That’s why I spent 13 months inventing when I could have spent 3 months learning WHAT ALREADY WORKED.
What did Einstein say again?
What was I doing wrong?
You may have heard the name Isaac Newton before.
That brainiac who came up with the fundamental theories of physics?
Isaac Newton’s ideas were based on a lot of complex mathematical formulas. Many of which required CALCULUS.
But there was a problem. Calculus didn’t exist yet! So before he could publish anything about his theory of gravitation, Newton had to invent calculus.
(I could surely think of better things to do with MY time.)
But when I was studying for the LSAT, I convinced myself that, like Isaac Newton, I had to invent my own LSAT system from scratch. That’s why I spent 13 months inventing when I could have spent 3 months learning WHAT ALREADY WORKED.
SO I’D WASTED 13 MONTHS OF MY LIFE FOR NO GOOD REASON!
And There Was Something Isaac Newton Himself Said That I’d Completely Forgotten: “If I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of giants.”
I think you know what I’m talking about here…
LSAT doesn’t doesn’t require inventing your own mathematical theory from scratch.
The answers are ALREADY out there…
If I had humbled myself and learned from someone else (instead of putting myself through that self-punishing journey)… I probably would’ve done even better than a 175! I would’ve learned EXACTLY what I needed to know. And all the time-tested tricks for DOMINATING THE EXAM.
And I wouldn’t have learned to hate the LSAT so much!
One of the hardest things about studying for the LSAT is the feeling of being ALONE. Not having someone to lead you through the process and tell you exactly what you’re doing wrong.
I wasn’t as isolated as I thought! Or at least, I didn’t have to be.
Lots of people (okay, mostly my mom) suggested I take a class or hire a tutor. But I was REALLY GOOD at coming up with excuses. And it was my STUBBORNNESS that made the LSAT so difficult!
I’ve already put in so much time. I don’t want to start from scratch.”
(To my dumb brain, it seemed like spending another 6 months to 1 year studying on my own was a better move than spending 3 months studying with someone else. Go figure!)
“I only have a limited time to study…”
(As it turns out, studying on your own takes WAY longer than studying with a tutor!)
“I don’t want to pay thousands of dollars for a big-name course just to get access to an instructor.”
(Instead I chose to sacrifice my whole social life for an ENTIRE YEAR! No regrets though, right?)
Self-Defeating Excuse #1:
“I only have a limited time to study…”
(As it turns out, studying on your own takes WAY longer than studying with a tutor!)
Self-Defeating Excuse #2:
I’ve already put in so much time. I don’t want to start from scratch.”
(To my dumb brain, it seemed like spending another 6 months to 1 year studying on my own was a better move than spending 3 months studying with someone else. Go figure!)
Self-Defeating Excuse #3:
“I don’t want to pay thousands of dollars for a big-name course just to get access to an instructor.”
(Instead I chose to sacrifice my whole social life for an ENTIRE YEAR! No regrets though, right?)
Wouldn’t You Rather Get Professional Guidance From Someone Who ALREADY Knows What They’re Doing?
I never imagined I’d end up a professional LSAT coach.
I can still remember (and feel the pain of) a time when the LSAT was A MAJOR ROADBLOCK standing in the way of my dream: to get into law school and become a successful attorney.