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I will be taking the LSAT and maybe the GRE at the end of the year. The prep courses have very high prices. I know this is important, but price tags up to 00 seem ridiculous to me. If you took a course, did it help you? Was it worth the cost? Share your experience, please.



They work. Everyone who I know that took it and did the Kaplan course for LSAT improved their test scores. I didn’t take one and I did well, but I had all of the books from my husband who had taken the course. It’s worth it and will pay off in the long run. Better score, means better school and possibly a scholarship and that equals a better job when you get out. You have to think long term.
Depends on where you are scoring. I took a prep class from Powerscore and definitely raised my score (I ended up in the 170s).
The main benefits of a class are that:
A. They lay out the strategies for you so you don’t have to figure them out on your own. You also have a source to go to when you have questions or need help. The strategies were probably the most valuable thing about the class, especially if you are having trouble with logic games.
B. They provide plenty of study material, and that material is directed in a particular way.
C. They structure your preparation in a way that self-studying cannot.
Do the classes help? Like a lot of things, part of it hinges on whether you put the time in. I did, and I worked pretty hard.
I also feel that I would have spent a lot more time trying to self-study because the course organized things in a way that made sense. Had I been studying on my own, it would have taken longer to arrive at some of the insights I needed to do well. Overall, I felt that the cost was worth it.
I teach for one of the larger course providers; I won’t mention which one.
The answer to your question really depends on several different factors.
(1) Where are you scoring right now? If you’re near the 50th percentile, it’s going to be very difficult for you to see much improvement. The bell curve at that point is so shallow that you need to get MUCH better (or worse) to end up with a different percentile score. Likewise, if you’re scoring below the 10th percentile or above the 90th percentile, the likelihood of realizing a significant gain is slim. Those who are most likely to benefit from test prep courses are those who are scoring at around the steepest points on the bell curve–between the 25th and 40th percentiles, and between the 60th and 75th percentiles.
(2) How hard are you going to work? Taking a prep course, in and of itself, isn’t going to do you any good unless you invest your own time and effort into learning what you are being taught. That means doing ALL of the assigned homework and taking ALL of the practice tests, at a bare minimum–courses also offer extra materials beyond those which are required, and they can help you too. The bottom line: enrolling in a course is not a quick fix.
(3) How smart are you? Some people are just plain stupid–we all know this but rarely say it. If you’re one of those people, don’t waste your time or money. For example, chances are pretty good that someone scoring in the 10th percentile is going to be too dumb to understand what’s going on in the course. If, however, you’re reasonably intelligent, you’re going to get more of a benefit.
Those who tend to benefit the most are, in my experience, students who are exceptionally intelligent and hardworking, but whose scores are low because of time-management problems, because of test anxiety, because of poor strategy, or because they need an intensive review of the material covered by tests that measure familiarity with content (such as the two science sections of the MCAT, or the GRE subject tests).
Good luck!!!
why are your answers so Looooooooong!
the real answer is:
No they´re not