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.

Taking a few moments to 'pre-phrase' a potential ideal answer choice between reading the stimulus and the ACs is a powerful LR technique. If you spot a missing bridge between the premises and conclusion before getting mired in the answer choices, there's a good chance you'll be able to pinpoint the correct answer in a fraction of the time it would otherwise have taken! This class provides a primer on what to look for when pre-phrasing, and how to capitalize on a solid pre-phrase.
Difficulty: 1-3 Star
Pace: 3-5 Questions

Register/Join


Book private tutoring with Bailey


Comment on this

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

Ever puzzled by a 5-star question, even after watching the video? This class is for you! This class will feature a set of some of the hardest LR questions, with ample time for questions.
Note: This is an advanced class and is designed for students who have already completed the core curriculum. Everyone is welcome, but we may redirect foundational questions to our weekend office hours class to keep the class moving along.
Difficulty: 4-5 Stars
Pace: 4-6 Questions

Register/Join


Book private tutoring with Henry


Comment on this

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

Can an hour of class cover 10 questions effectively? This class will pare each question down to the essentials. Learn to prioritize more efficiently, and move with purpose in your approach to LR! Instructor explanations will be short and snappy as this class prioritizes SPEED!
Note: Question time will be extremely limited. Students are welcome to bring any questions that we don’t have time for to our weekly office hours session.
Difficulty: 1-5 stars
Pace: Fast! 10 questions

Register/Join


Book private tutoring with Nicole


Comment on this

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

Register/Join


Book private tutoring with Henry


Comment on this

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

Register/Join


Book private tutoring with Henry


Comment on this

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: 3-5 Questions

Register/Join


Book private tutoring with Eric Revis


Comment on this

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

Ever puzzled by a 5-star question, even after watching the video? This class is for you! This class will feature a set of some of the hardest LR questions, with ample time for questions.
Note: This is an advanced class and is designed for students who have already completed the core curriculum. Everyone is welcome, but we may redirect foundational questions to our weekend office hours class to keep the class moving along.
Difficulty: 4-5 Stars
Pace: 4-6 Questions

Register/Join


Book private tutoring with Eric Hu


Comment on this

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

Join senior 7Sage LSAT instructor, Nicole as she tackles unprepared LSAT questions in real-time, offering you a window into her thought processes and strategies while the clock is ticking. How does a top scorer approach timing differently, and which habits are most effective? You will have 3 minutes to answer each 5 star question on your own, before the instructor attempts to solve it in front of you, voicing their thoughts as they go.
Difficulty: 4-5 star questions
Pace: 5-8 Questions

Register/Join


Book private tutoring with Nicole


Comment on this

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 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: 5-8 Questions

Register/Join


Book private tutoring with Eric Revis


Comment on this

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!

Register/Join


Book private tutoring with Eric Revis


Comment on this