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Jonny
without blueprint: 158
with blueprint: 172 |
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For the majority of my time at UCLA, I was much more concerned with the County Line's surf report and Bear Mountain's snow report than with my degree progress report. By the end of my junior year however, I realized that neither sitting in the water nor shredding the mountain would support me after I graduated. As the reality of life after college began to loom on the horizon, I figured what the heck, maybe I'll just take the LSAT and stay in school for a while longer.
This seemed like a good idea until I remembered that I suck at taking standardized tests. Fortunately, several of my fraternity brothers had taken the Blueprint course. They explained to me that my pathetic standardized testing acumen really had nothing to do with success on the LSAT. I was incredulous at first, but boy were they right!
Not only did Blueprint teach me exactly how to approach every single type of question on the LSAT, but my instructor made class a fun and rewarding experience. While many other test prep courses are essentially four-hour lectures comparable to getting your teeth pulled, Blueprint classes are set in a very laid-back and informal environment. The instructors are approachable, entertaining, and extremely knowledgeable about the test. They even arrive 30 minutes early before every lesson so that they can answer individual questions and help students with anything they do not understand.
By the time my LSAT course had ended, I had not only answered almost every LSAT question from the last 10 years, but I actually understood why all of the correct answers were correct and why every wrong answer choice was indeed incorrect. While the wording of the test necessitates that an individual select the ''most appropriate answer choice'' for each question, Blueprint made it clear that for each question there is always 1 right answer and 4 completely wrong ones. There is never any guessing as to which answer is ''better'' than another, so we could always determine with certainty which answer is correct. I'll be honest: Blueprint kicks ass and I recommend no other LSAT prep course but Blueprint to anyone. |
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