I took prep test #62 today and had to stop when I couldn't complete the Logic Games section. I just couldn't move past it. That has never ever ever happened to me before in the entire time I
type and did #s 1-60. So Now I'm doing #60+. I blind reviewed these, wrote out the corrected reasoning for the questions I got wrong, and went over the answers the next day to reinforce the conc
1) Please do go near the tests. You can learn a lot just by taking them, and I personally think that coming up with strategies first is counterproductive, as a lot of them just don't work in a re
@ddakjiking You like to live dangerously, I see Top scorers are top scorers—maybe there are fewer but for the #6 law school in the country, my guess is that things are business as usual more or less
the December exam I took PTs #40 (June 2003), #68 (Dec. 2012), #69 (June 2013), and #70 (Oct. 2013). With these 4 tests I score three 156s and one 157. I felt I was prepared for the test, and that th
I actually found a NA question that did in fact have "most" in the correct answer choice. As was predicted, the stimulus implied the necessity to have the correct answer be qualified with
Let me go over the other answer choices with commentary, and then maybe it will help you with these types of questions. I am surprised that you got all the way to prep test #68 without really having a
It is time consuming but once you get it, you just kind of get it. The fact that its valid argument #6 is kind of meaningless, the main thing you want to understand is whether its valid or not, so jus
Hi all, just hoping for some of your opinions. I have lots of preptests already (all up to #62) and I am wondering if these are enough to practise off or should I ignore these and purchase "newe
The argument is #6 of Section 2 of Prep Test 23. They discuss prehistoric chimpanzee species, tool use and humans. I won't type the argument out unless y'all need me to, but was wondering if
i have a question on diagramming multiple conditionals: e.g., Q#15, section 1 of PT #63 (june 2011), choice B states, "if someone tells the same lie to two different people, then neither of those