11 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Get the real thing, October 30, 2010
This review is from: Cracking the LSAT, 2011 Edition (Graduate School Test Preparation) (Paperback)
If you want to prepare to take the LSAT and get a good sense of your expected score and areas that need improvement, you can learn about the structure of the test in a clear, concise manner and practice with questions from real tests with LSAC publications such as "The Next 10 Actual, Official LSAT PrepTests" or "LSAT Logical Reasoming Bible."
If you want to learn about the structure of the test by having someone talk down to you for about 50 pages on paper and then waste your time with questions crafted through faulty logic, "Cracking the LSAT" by Princeton Review is for you.
This is the first time I've written a customer review for test prep material, but in this instance I feel it is necessary because over the past 6 years I've been - how to put this...IMPRESSIVELY DISAPPOINTED - with Princeton Review materials for the SAT, SAT Subject tests, the GRE, and now the LSAT. For each of these tests I've had the opportunity to compare sample questions with Kaplan prep material and previously administered tests, and in comparison the Princton Review materials are severely lacking. I've had too many experiences of reading barely sensible questions and answer explanations and spotting grammatical/arithmetic errors (maybe typos, maybe not) in PR prep materials to express any confidence in this and other PR publications. Save yourself some money and frustration and get some real tests from LSAC.
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