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.
Pace: 5-7 Questions
NOTE: To join this class, you'll have to submit your name and email address. You can use any email address, real or fake.
With a double portion of LR guaranteed every test, the Logical Reasoning section is more important than ever! Mondays through Wednesdays will feature questions of average difficulty, while Thursdays and Fridays will feature the most challenging questions the test has to offer.
Difficulty: 1-3 Stars
Pace: 4-7 Questions
NOTE: To join this class, you'll have to submit your name and email address. You can use any email address, real or fake.
Questions of the resolve, reconcile, and explain type ask us to understand the logical gap between elements of the stimulus- and what’s required to bridge it. This class will explore the strategies best applied to RRE questions!
Difficulty: 3-5 Stars
Pace: 4-6 Questions
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
NOTE: To join this class, you'll have to submit your name and email address. You can use any email address, real or fake.
Split into PSAr (find the rule) and PSAa (application) questions, these cousins of Sufficient Assumption questions tend to be less straightforward- and thus more difficult! This class will cover the concepts and strategies that are essential for effectively navigating both variants of this question type.
Difficulty: 3-5 stars
Pace: 4-8 Questions
NOTE: To join this class, you'll have to submit your name and email address. You can use any email address, real or fake.
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!
NOTE: To join this class, you'll have to submit your name and email address. You can use any email address, real or fake.
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
NOTE: To join this class, you'll have to submit your name and email address. You can use any email address, real or fake.
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