LSAT Prep for a good cause, Part Deux

My site is www.acmelsatprep.com. Here's a little other info and some references:

Here are two posts from earlier this year from former students of mine. The first studied with me, got a 175, continued studying with me and got a 178 on a retake:

https://www.reddit.com/r/LSAT/comments/bfcnd6/a_shoutout_to_a_great_coach_lsat_dan/

Here's another student:

https://www.reddit.com/r/LSAT/comments/bw2i0v/went_from_165_to_172_with_the_help_of_lsatdan/

Also, another student, redditor Venetian_Lights (I think there's an underscore) got a 170 in January, continued studying with me, and got a 175 in March.

All of these students were online students whom I never met. Another student who took a live class from me at UCLA and then did some private tutoring was recently accepted to Harvard Law. Here's her review: https://www.reddit.com/r/LSAT/comments/cntprb/a_tutor_review/

I also have over 1000 LSAT hours booked at the tutoring referral site Wyzant, with 300 rated sessions and an average rating of 4.9/5 (https://www.wyzant.com/match/tutor/75666120?search_id=461746b3-5927-4bdc-bcb3-ec1faa395a49).

I also come highly recommended by Mike Kim, who wrote the best all-in-one book on the test out there - The LSAT Trainer. On my profile is a link to a post on his website, where he told a student that I should charge 4x what I do.

I've been at it a long time. I've consulted to Khan Academy when they were first getting started, and multiple times to Barron's as they've prepared LSAT books for publication.

When I started doing this, 90% of my sessions were in person, but now 90% of my business is online, and I've had students from Moscow, Canada, and South Korea. I use a site called Scribblar, which provides a virtual whiteboard, so I can sketch diagrams for games or LR arguments on my screen, and they show up on yours in real time while we talk through via telephone (or Skype, if you're not in the USA). Scribblar also allows you to save anything on the board to a pdf at the touch of a button. It's a great platform - no extra charge, no downloads.

I'm a former attorney (99th percentile LSAT; UCLA Law, 2007), and I've been studying the LSAT for almost a decade - writing about it and trying to think of better ways to understand and explain it.

The only thing I ask is that you not contact me directly via Wyzant, as they take a percentage of my pay from students who find me there, but feel free to browse my profile (link above) and read my reviews.

626 827 5863 anytime.

-Dan Oakes

/r/LSAT Thread Parent