Posts Tagged ‘Logical Reasoning’

NOTE: To join this class, you'll have to submit your name and email address. You can use any email address, real or fake.

The ability to understand the structure of an argument quickly and accurately is one of the most critical LSAT skills. This class will cover the concepts and strategies that will render even the most complex arguments simple as you work through a set of Main Conclusion and Argument Part questions.
Difficulty: 3-5 Stars
Pace: 4-6 Questions

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Book private tutoring with Henry


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Both MSS and MBT questions ask us to evaluate inferences- what can be validly drawn for the stimulus, and are all valid inferences equally valid? This class will explore the significant similarities and differences between the two classes, with an emphasis on the tips and strategies best applied when you encounter a question of either type on the test.
Difficulty: 3-5 Stars
Pace: 4-6 Questions

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Book private tutoring with Nicole


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NOTE: To join this class, you'll have to submit your name and email address. You can use any email address, real or fake.

Both MSS and MBT questions ask us to evaluate inferences- what can be validly drawn for the stimulus, and are all valid inferences equally valid? This class will explore the significant similarities and differences between the two classes, with an emphasis on the tips and strategies best applied when you encounter a question of either type on the test.
Difficulty: 3-5 Stars
Pace: 4-6 Questions

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Book private tutoring with Katie


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NOTE: To join this class, you'll have to submit your name and email address. You can use any email address, real or fake.

Struggling to understand the notion of support and the critical role it plays Logical Reasoning? This class features an in-depth exploration and analysis of question types within the strengthening subset including NA, Strengthen, PSAr, and SA questions. Learn to navigate the nuanced differences that make each of these question types unique, yet similar!
Pace: 4-8 Questions
Difficulty: 3-5 Stars

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Book private tutoring with Katie


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NOTE: To join this class, you'll have to submit your name and email address. You can use any email address, real or fake.

A variant of most strongly supported and pseudo-sufficient assumption (find the rule) questions, principle questions ask us to identify a statement that underlies or coheres with the argument presented in the stimulus. Learn to effectively differentiate between irrelevant or contradictory options and the close matches this question subtype demands!

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Book private tutoring with Eric Hu


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NOTE: To join this class, you'll have to submit your name and email address. You can use any email address, real or fake.

Struggling with LR? This class is your safe space for building confidence, one question at a time. Let’s work through it together—no pressure, just progress! You’ll work methodically with your instructor: breaking down the stimulus, evaluating each answer choice, and identifying underlying patterns that will show up again and again.
Difficulty: Foundational, 1-4 stars
Pace: Slow, 3-6 questions

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Book private tutoring with Rahela


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Being able to quickly identify the assumptions an argument's author makes is one of the most vital LSAT skills. Which are critical to the argument, and which are unimportant? Are they always invalid? This class will explore the space between the lines, home to assumptions of every kind.
Difficulty: 3-5 stars
Pace: 3-5 Questions

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Book private tutoring with Eric Hu


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NOTE: To join this class, you'll have to submit your name and email address. You can use any email address, real or fake.

Have your test coming up soon? Or just need a recap of things you've learned thus far? Join Eric for an end-of-week review that could include games, tests, and, knowing Eric, talk about food of some sort, to see what you need to work on and what you've conquered thus far.
Difficulty: 1-5 stars
Pace: 6-10 Questions (plus theory questions!)

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Book private tutoring with Eric Revis


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When the clock is ticking, high-scorers don't always have a perfect grasp of the stimulus- but they can still get to the right answer through elimination! This class highlights important answer choice features that can help you eliminate wrong answers with confidence.
You’ll do the first two questions as a class. After that, you’ll get 2-3 minutes to attempt each question on your own before reviewing and discussing your choices as a class.
Difficulty: 3-5 stars
Pace: 5-7 Questions

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Book private tutoring with Eric Revis


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NOTE: To join this class, you'll have to submit your name and email address. You can use any email address, real or fake.

When you get a question wrong you haven't just missed the correct answer, but have actively chosen a wrong answer. What makes a trap answer so alluring? Often a bad answer would be correct if allowed an assumption that's just a step too far. Learn to effectively scrutinize attractive answer choices, and stop feeding trap answers the assumptions they crave! The class does one question together as a warm up. After that, students will get 2-3 minutes to attempt each question on their own before reviewing with the instructor.
Difficulty: 2-5 Star
Pace: 4-6 Questions

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Book private tutoring with ZeSean


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