While the March 2022 LSAT proved limited in both popularity and content—fewer than 7,000 people sat for it, and only two test forms were used—it still managed to pack quite a punch for those in attendance! In episode 105, Dave and Jon cover it all: the scored and experimental sections, the relative difficulty of everything presented, their expectations for the scoring scales, and the accuracy of their predictions from their latest Crystal Ball webinar (including its relevance for the upcoming April test).
Timestamps
0:00 – Intro
3:09 – This Week in the LSAT World (sign up for our free LSAT webinars here: www.powerscore.com/freeseminars)
9:33 – March 2022 LSAT: General Impressions
20:01 – Disclaimers and Reminders
27:13 – The March 2022 LSAT Review: Dissecting all sections seen throughout the March ’22 LSAT testing period, including what was real and what was experimental.
52:24 – Scoring Scale Predictions. Dave and Jon provide their scoring scale predictions for all test configurations seen throughout the week so that students can have a better idea of what to expect on score release day.
1:07:50 – Outro
Pat P says
I got the N/S Apple tree game section (it was horrible, definitely disagree with the difficulty assessment as a 165 January LSAT scorer). I felt like one game was missing a rule and I couldn’t figure it out after multiple re-reads, had to guess on probably 5 questions overall on this LG set which I haven’t had to do in months, even with only practicing the hardest games. These games were very open-ended with so many possibilities and limited inferences. My average LG score is -2. (I know I got killed on this LG set though, probably -8 or worse with having to flat out guess on questions). I went through all the practice games from Crystal Ball and I wish I got the more common reasonable section. Frustrating. I will agree this test felt substantially easier overall than January though. RC was way easier, LG was still difficult and LR was average.