This is what I used in the beginning-
The Memory Method For Reading Comp
These are drills to be done with individual reading comp passages. Do these drills with 6-8 passages.
It may be tough at first, especially the “Check Your Memory” section. But…
EXISTENTIAL QUANTIFIERS BRIEF Lesson 3of 30
• There exist things such as ______ (fill in the blank- predict)
Ex: happy people v. poor people (middle intersection)
• Indicators: “SOME”
• **No such thing as a contrapositive- it does NOT exist for EX…
I've heard of people skimming the questions before reading the passage. It's suppose to be quick so that you do not get too carry away when you're reading the passage. But many prep companies do not recommend it. I guess it really depends on you…
Focus on the areas that you feel that you are still having trouble with. BR BR BR! It's important. If there is a particular question type that you keep missing maybe you should purchase the Cambridge packet for it and drill/BR until you feel like…
@harrismegan good way to practice. That's how I first started out at first. Then I realized that being able to identify the predicate made this process a lot easier.
My boss always told me the more you miss now on PTs the more room you have for improvement before the actual LSAT. I think those words were very encouraging since I know I can miss every single question in the beginning of the prep but after that i…
9AM/10 AM- Reading time (The Economist, SA, and a novel)
11AM- Drill 1 section of LR/2 RC passages
12PM- BR 2 sections from a previous PT taken from the day before
1PM- Lunch
2PM- Finish BR the last 2 sections of a PT
3PM- Watch every video expl…
Perfect! Thank you. I just wanted to make sure my reasoning behind these two was correct since there aren't any explanations for either of these two in the course.
@Charles11 to answer your question what I'm starting to do with these uncommon questions is make a list in an excel sheet and save it for a later time. I also try to memorize the pattern used on that question type.