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In this episode of the Hey Future Lawyer podcast, Ben Parker and Madeline draw on over a decade of combined LSAT teaching experience to break down the most common mistakes students make while preparing for the exam. They discuss how many popular LSAT strategies are based on “received knowledge” rather than real teaching experience and explain how instructors’ perspectives evolve after working with thousands of students.
The conversation focuses on the idea that the LSAT is far simpler than many prep companies make it seem. Ben and Madeline argue that students often overcomplicate the test with rigid frameworks, formal logic systems, and overly mechanical strategies that distract from the real skill being tested: understanding what you read and determining what logically follows from it.
They also discuss why accuracy should come before speed in LSAT preparation and why many students sabotage their progress by chasing timing tricks instead of building genuine comprehension. The episode explores how strong LSAT performance comes from consistent practice, thoughtful review, and learning to engage directly with arguments rather than relying on memorized shortcuts.
Throughout the discussion, Ben and Madeline challenge common LSAT myths and explain how a reading-first, common-sense approach can dramatically simplify the test. The episode offers practical insights for students who feel stuck, as well as a clearer framework for how to study effectively and avoid the traps that derail most LSAT prep journeys.
Study LSAT with us at HeyFuturelawyer.com
By Hey Future Lawyer4.5
3131 ratings
In this episode of the Hey Future Lawyer podcast, Ben Parker and Madeline draw on over a decade of combined LSAT teaching experience to break down the most common mistakes students make while preparing for the exam. They discuss how many popular LSAT strategies are based on “received knowledge” rather than real teaching experience and explain how instructors’ perspectives evolve after working with thousands of students.
The conversation focuses on the idea that the LSAT is far simpler than many prep companies make it seem. Ben and Madeline argue that students often overcomplicate the test with rigid frameworks, formal logic systems, and overly mechanical strategies that distract from the real skill being tested: understanding what you read and determining what logically follows from it.
They also discuss why accuracy should come before speed in LSAT preparation and why many students sabotage their progress by chasing timing tricks instead of building genuine comprehension. The episode explores how strong LSAT performance comes from consistent practice, thoughtful review, and learning to engage directly with arguments rather than relying on memorized shortcuts.
Throughout the discussion, Ben and Madeline challenge common LSAT myths and explain how a reading-first, common-sense approach can dramatically simplify the test. The episode offers practical insights for students who feel stuck, as well as a clearer framework for how to study effectively and avoid the traps that derail most LSAT prep journeys.
Study LSAT with us at HeyFuturelawyer.com

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