Alex raised his score from a diagnostic 154 to an official 178 with two years of study.
Jackson scored a 172 after studying with the Demon and will be attending UVA School of Law starting in the fall.
Tyler shares his experience studying with LSAT Demon and the law school scholarships it led him to.
Former LSAT Demon student Jennifer joins Nathan to share her LSAT success story and offer words of encouragement and advice to other students.
Hundreds of students have washed up on our shores bemoaning their inability to improve their Reading Comprehension only to discover its as learnable as the rest of the test. Here's how.
LSAT Logical Reasoning requires neither mastery of formal logic nor the ability to diagram arguments. Don’t fall for this gimmick. Read on to discover our more intuitive approach to LR.
Arguments comprise most of the LSAT. Honing your ability to eviscerate bad arguments is a surefire method for improving your score on the test's Logical Reasoning section.
Master LSAT conditional statements: learn sufficient vs necessary, avoid logic flaws, and boost your LSAT score with clear, everyday examples.
Master LSAT Logical Reasoning: spot premises vs. conclusions, use indicator words, and tackle arguments with confidence.
What makes an argument valid or invalid? Why is validity important on Logical Reasoning? Learning the differences between good and bad arguments will improve your LSAT score.