Gives a great headstart on logical reasoning, and conditional logic. The base plan gives you access to 50+ hours of lessons, 99 official LSAT prep tests, and gives an in-depth answer explanation to each question. It was best regarded for its Logic Games section, which has since been removed from the LSAT. Best if you are an independent learner. A more affordable LSAT program compared to kaplan.
A more structured study plan, live lessons available, best for students who want a traditional classroom experience. On the pricier side.
Differs from Kaplan and 7sage in the way that it is not a traditional rigid study plan. Instead LSAT Demon gives you personalized questions based on past performances. The questions come from real past LSAT exams. A much Pricier option. Best known for its logical reasoning, and reading comp sections.
Covers conditional reasoning and more formal logic in depth, and an overview on how to attack the test. Excellent for self-study. (**PowerScore also has a podcast that is well regarded.)
The closest you will get to the real LSAT. LSAC releases past exams very similar to the upcoming exams. Allows for an identical set of problems to those you will see on the real exam.
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