Patience and predictable gains on a long LSAT arc
Improvement rarely looks linear. A calmer frame helps you trust the process when a timed section wobbles.
Contributor
Lead LSAT Instructor · AO Tutor
JD · 12+ years LSAT teaching
Morgan focuses on turning missed questions into repeatable review habits—especially in Logical Reasoning.
Published posts by this author.
Improvement rarely looks linear. A calmer frame helps you trust the process when a timed section wobbles.
They solve different problems. Timed work measures decision speed; untimed review builds accuracy and vocabulary for the test’s language.
A tight review loop beats a perfect notebook. Here is a simple way to learn from wrong answers and keep moving.
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