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 jackieb
  • Posts: 21
  • Joined: Jul 10, 2025
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#121882
I am so frustrated and confused. I scored a 168 in June and since have consistently scored 170-174 on practice tests. However, both the August and October tests I scored 164. This makes no sense to me- are the currently released practice tests outdated? I have anxiety but not enough that it could be explained entirely by that. What is going on??
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 Jeff Wren
PowerScore Staff
  • PowerScore Staff
  • Posts: 1217
  • Joined: Oct 19, 2022
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#121892
Hi jackie,

First, I definitely can understand your frustration. Scoring lower on your second and third attempts is unusual (but not unheard of), and scoring that much lower on the real LSAT compared to your practice tests is also somewhat unusual. Scoring a few points (around 3) lower than your practice test average is actually pretty typical even when things go relatively smoothly during the test.

As for what exactly is going on, I'm going to throw the ball back in your court and ask you to answer that question.

Did you notice anything about your specific exams that seemed unusual to you, such as an unusual amount of hard LR questions, or rare LR questions/concepts, a killer RC passage, etc.? Did you come away from the exam feeling reasonably good about how it went or not? If you normally finish each section with a few minutes extra to review some of your questions (which is fairly common for students scoring in the 170s), did that happen during these exams? One thing that we always recommend that students do is to try to take notes about how they felt they did (both overall and on each section) right after the exam while it is still fresh in your memory.

How were you feeling mentally/physically during these exams? Were you healthy and well-rested? Being sick and/or sleep deprived can both harm one's score. Another possible explanation when scores start going down is burnout. Have you been studying too much without taking sufficient breaks, especially if you have other work/life responsibilities as well?

You mentioned that you have anxiety, "but not enough that it could be explained entirely by that." I'm not a doctor, but I could easily see how anxiety could negatively impact a student's performance by 5-10 points depending on the severity and exactly what occurs during the test.

Unfortunately, since LSAC doesn't release the details of your tests, you can't know for certain exactly which questions you missed and why, which makes figuring out exactly what happened more difficult.

One other thing that you can do (if you remember some of the details of your tests, such as some of the LR and RC passage topics) is to listen to our test recaps for the August and October tests to see if you can match up your exam with the sections listed in our recap. This should give you better sense of the overall difficulty of those sections.

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