Before teaching the LSAT, I was an SAT tutor. In other words, I love test prep. When I started tutoring the LSAT, I didn't even have an official score on record (this was before TPR had a score requirement for its tutors). I took a cold LSAT practice test and got a 166 and they let me train for the LSAT, and I proved I was ready to teach it. My first introduction to my students in those days was, "I'm not old enough to drink, but I am old enough to teach you the LSAT" (true story!) That was years ago, and now I'm old enough to drink, but I'm not too old to teach you the LSAT with as much enthusiasm as I had when I was 20.
I scored a 171 (98th percentile) on the LSAT in 2008. My application with that score got me into T14s Georgetown and Cornell, in addition to UCLA Law (#15 at the time and where I attended law school), and waitlisted at T14s University of Chicago, Columbia, UVA, and Northwestern. I passed the bar in 2012 and I've been practicing law for 13 years since. I decided to come back to LSAT tutoring because I love helping aspiring lawyers achieve their goals.