Subscription pricing
Does anyone do this or thought of doing this? Could it be potentially helpful since the passages get increasingly difficult, starting with the harder ones would give you a fresher mind. Any thoughts?
0
Does anyone do this or thought of doing this? Could it be potentially helpful since the passages get increasingly difficult, starting with the harder ones would give you a fresher mind. Any thoughts?
12 comments
Thanks for all the input!
@dtabariai582 you may read the passage for 20 seconds first, if you think this subject might be tough for you, then you move on to the next passage. But I do not suggest you always skip around . To 170 scorers, no matter how hard it is, they will do it. I believe the best to improve your reading comprehension is to read more. Good luck!
@2543.hopkins I did an older RC passage with 4E out of 7 questions and I thought something must be wrong, but actually it is not. lol
I would totally pitch @974's plan if I were ever to work for LSAC. ^_^d
Wow. So many meltdowns ... I'm just picturing the chaos ... And then there would be a few insane chaps (7sagers, mainly) who are like ... So what?
The best troll would be for them to make E the answer to the whole test. Now that would kill the 170+ score band just out of sheer paranoia.
Could you imagine if LSAC actually thought to do that? That would be a horrible situation.
I specifically didn't mark C, I used the gambler's fallacy to guess my way to 60+% success!
Like Pac Daddy @974 did on the dino game
...or you can just mark in C for all 24-27 questions. Hey! It can happen!
Don't do it, you're just inviting bubbling errors and other issues and as Nicole said the order has nothing to do with difficulty. Some passages are hard, but some are easy, some questions are hard, and some are easy. There is no way to gauge these differences without just doing them so you may as well got start to finish to avoid trouble. There are no tricks so just keep it simple.
Nope. Order has little to do with difficulty in RC. Recently saw quite a toughy in Passage 1. And skipping around is—dare I say it?—a crutch, and it's not a crutch that will help you with anything.