<p>I know everyone is different, but I plan on using the rest of my summer to study</p>
<p>So 6 weeks (5-7 days a week) for 10 hours or so a day.</p>
<p>I plan on taking the LSAT in September just to see where I stand.</p>
<p>I know everyone is different, but I plan on using the rest of my summer to study</p>
<p>So 6 weeks (5-7 days a week) for 10 hours or so a day.</p>
<p>I plan on taking the LSAT in September just to see where I stand.</p>
<p>That seems reasonable. I recall studying all summer and taking a Kaplan class during the summer, and taking it in the fall. </p>
<p>Woahhhh that’s a lot of time spent studying the LSAT. 10 hours a day?! I can’t think of almost anything I would do for 10 hours at a time except maybe sleep…</p>
<p>I spent about 2-3 weeks studying, started sporadic and finished with maybe 3 or 4 hours per day in the week before the exam. But hey, if you’re that dedicated then go for it! Just don’t feel that you HAVE to spend that kind of time on it, or that everyone does.</p>
<p>A future lawyer’s LSAT score has an enormous impact on the future, and so if there’s anything to get right, it’s the LSAT score. I’d be curious to see how the original poster turned out.</p>
<p>Well yes, you do want to allow enough time to reach your LSAT goal of course. I wish the OP all the luck in the world in that respect! </p>