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Mapping Out Logic In Stimulus
It is taking me too long to map out logic presented in the stimulus. This is very important for MBT, MBF, Principle, Parallel and SA, etc.
Can someone please guide me to where I can practice doing this because I have not seen any quizzes that has long English passages that need to be mapped out into logic.
I need to practice this immediately!!!!!
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7 comments
@nye887085 Haha. I appreciate it. I don't know how much I help, but I try!
Can someone please guide me to where I can practice doing this because I have not seen any quizzes that has long English passages that need to be mapped out into logic.
Simple answer.
Don't rely on diagramming to answer as many Q's.
As Pac said ... 2-3 AT MOST. I mean, maximum.
You really want to get to a place where your skills are developed to the point where if you are mapping out 5 questions per section that is too many. 2-3 at most per section is what you want to shoot for, especially as the LSAT continues to move away from conditional logic as was the case on October's exam.
@2543 could I get some help on this too!
@2543 ??? They should call you GSU Helpful !! :-)
Sent you a PM on this. Take a deep breath. You're going to work through this.
Do you have access to the course content? I seem to remember some logic diagramming drills. But I would just recommend drilling those question types if they are giving you a hard time. I will also note that ideally you should get to a place where you are doing most logic diagramming in your head, for LR and not LG of course. I do very little diagramming in LR, and of course everyone is different but I think true mastery of logic will mean you can internalize the logic. But drilling those question types will be your best method, especially ones like Parallel reasoning that tend to have lots of conditional relationships.