LSAT Study Plan
AI-generated Daily Plans for the Law School Admission Test. Logic-heavy law school admissions test with Logical Reasoning, Reading Comprehension, and an unscored writing sample.
What's on the Law School Admission Test
- Logical Reasoning: Argument Structure
- Logical Reasoning: Assumption Family
- Logical Reasoning: Inference Family
- Reading Comprehension: Single Passages
- Reading Comprehension: Comparative Passages
Why it's hard
LSAT score improvement is non-linear — most students plateau in the mid-150s. The breakthrough comes from formal-logic diagramming and ruthless answer-choice elimination, not more practice problems.
How Fennie helps
Fennie drills LR question types one at a time, tracks your accuracy per type, and surfaces the conditional-logic patterns you're misreading — which is where 5+ point jumps come from.
A sample week of prep
- 01Mon — LR: assumption and necessary assumption
- 02Tue — LR: flaw questions with type identification
- 03Wed — RC: science passage with annotation
- 04Thu — LR: strengthen/weaken pairs
- 05Fri — RC: comparative passages timed
- 06Sat — Full timed section
- 07Sun — Review and regenerate plan
Sample only — your real Fennie plan adapts daily based on what you got wrong, what you ignored, and how close you are to test day.
Frequently asked questions
Is logic games still on the LSAT?
No — the Analytical Reasoning section (logic games) was removed in 2024. The current format has only Logical Reasoning and Reading Comprehension.
What's a good LSAT score?
165+ is competitive for top-50 schools; 170+ is in range for T14. The 50th percentile is around 152.
Can I prep for the LSAT in 3 months?
Possible to score in the 160s; harder to hit 170+ without 6+ months. Fennie's plans set a realistic point-target and track weekly progress against it.
Start your LSAT Daily Plan
Tell Fennie your target score and test date. You'll get a personalized daily plan in under a minute — and it adapts every day based on your performance.
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