A wrong answer journal turns LSAT review into a repeatable system. Instead of simply noting that an answer was wrong, you identify the reason you chose it and the pattern behind the miss.
What to Track
- Question type.
- Your wrong answer.
- Why it looked attractive.
- Why the credited answer is right.
- The repeatable lesson.
How Often to Review It
Review the journal weekly. Look for patterns by question type, timing pressure, and answer-trap language.
Next Step
Use the LSAT score calculator to connect this topic back to your actual percentile, target schools, and retake decision.
Official Sources to Check
Use this guide for planning, then verify current test rules, score reporting, application requirements, and school disclosures with primary sources before making final decisions.
How to Use This Guide
Start by identifying the decision this page supports: setting a target score, interpreting a practice test, choosing schools, planning a retake, or preparing application materials. Then compare the advice here with your target schools, deadlines, budget, and current official requirements. The strongest plan is specific to your score range and school list.