Hi JS, it's me again. You are really sticking to your 1 preptest every two day schedule.
Anyway, another tough question. The flaw here is not about insects vs ants, but rather ants vs species of ants. The stimulus says ants are the most successfu…
Are you guys trying this with a full 4 section tests? One of the problems I anticipate is that your brain get fatigued after working on hard questions for a long period of time and you'll miss the easy questions. Imagine just finishining a 4 passage…
I'll definitely add you. I am pretty much spending all day studying LSAT, so basically 8 hours a day. I am actually planning to do 1 pretest per day beginning in August; I am just concentrating on logic games this week. There is a natural tendency t…
I am taking the October LSAT too, I studied using the Powerscore series for about a month and took the June LSAT. I was so disappointed when I only got a 158 on the actual test. In retrospect, it's not all that surprising, considering that I was one…
Anyone interested in studying together via google doc or Skype? I just finished all the lessons and planning to start working on the preptests. I scored 166 on the diagnostic.
I haven taken quite some preptests and in my experience, the December/October scaling tends to be more lenient even though the questions are not that hard
Thanks, I didn't get this question right on the first run through, I had to look up the word anomaly to get this question right. You been quite active lately. Every lesson I go I see your insightful comments. You planning to take the October LSAT?
The last sentence is referring to to the part about statistical anomaly. It's basically saying that just because something does not occur frequently, that is not a sufficient reason to not do that thing.
So the argument basically goes like this: …
I don't see any flaw in your reasoning, the conclusion does still stand on its own, but this answer choice weaken's the support that flows from the premises to the conclusion. The argument makes sense because their is an assumption that the two gro…