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LSAT Top 3 Percentile (2020 170 LSAT Score)
Patrick G.

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Hourly Rate: $55
Response time: 12 hours

About Patrick


Bio

Hi, I'm Patrick. I got a 170 on the LSAT back in 2020 (top 3% that year), used it to go to George Washington University Law School, and now I work as a law clerk for a probate judge in Michigan. I've tutored the LSAT for friends and family, helped 1Ls at GW with their classes, and generally spent way too much time thinking about how this test works. Turns out I actually enjoy breaking down these questions with people.

My approach is pretty straightforward: figure out where you're stuck and...

Hi, I'm Patrick. I got a 170 on the LSAT back in 2020 (top 3% that year), used it to go to George Washington University Law School, and now I work as a law clerk for a probate judge in Michigan. I've tutored the LSAT for friends and family, helped 1Ls at GW with their classes, and generally spent way too much time thinking about how this test works. Turns out I actually enjoy breaking down these questions with people.

My approach is pretty straightforward: figure out where you're stuck and fix that specific thing. Maybe you're brand new and don't even know what a sufficient assumption question is. Maybe you've taken 20 practice tests and keep missing the same types of Logic Games. Maybe you're consistently scoring 165 but can't break through to 170+. Whatever it is, we'll work through real LSAT questions together, talk through your reasoning, and build strategies that make sense for you. The LSAT rewards pattern recognition and disciplined thinking more than raw intelligence, which means it's totally learnable if you know what to look for.

At GW I tutored first-year students and did some mentoring through student organizations, which taught me that everyone's brain works differently. Some people are natural logical thinkers who struggle with dense reading passages. Others can speed-read anything but panic when they see a logic game about seating arrangements. I try to identify what you're already good at and use that as a foundation to tackle the stuff that's giving you trouble. Whether you're aiming for 160 or pushing for 175, the goal is the same: build your skills to the point where you can execute consistently under time pressure.

I remember how much LSAT prep sucked. The frustration of bombing a section you thought you understood, the anxiety of the timer, the weird relief when something finally clicked. I think it helps to work with someone who recently went through it and knows what you're dealing with. If you want help building a study plan or working through specific question types, feel free to


Education

The George Washington University Law School
J.D.

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Response time: 12 hours
Hourly Rate: $55
Response time: 12 hours
Contact Patrick