I have a quick question I am confused on. Does every section on the LSAT start with the easiest questions, then progressively move on to the hardest? As in, would question 1 be the easiest and then question 25 (or whatever the last question is) ends on the hardest?

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5 comments

  • Monday, Apr 18 2016

    Yes, to an extent. As a general rule of thumb, you can expect the first few questions to be the easiest, and the last few to be the most difficult. However, don't go into a section with the assumption that 1-10 = easy, 11-18 moderate, 19-25 = difficult.

    The LSAT writers have been known to include difficult questions somewhere in the middle (say, 12, 13, 14, etc.) and somewhat easy questions towards the end (21, 22, 23, etc.).

    In the past, I've shot myself in the foot by focusing my attention on the first half of a LR section, only to find out that there were 2 or 3 incredibly easy questions scattered somewhere in between questions 15-25.

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  • Monday, Apr 18 2016

    Occasionally, that is

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  • Monday, Apr 18 2016

    In my experience, some of the newest LSATs have been throwing in tougher questions at the beginning, particularly in LR and to a lesser extent in RC.

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  • Monday, Apr 18 2016

    Agreed. That's the general progression, but it is far from a rule. I also find that questions 18-22 or so tend to be the most difficult.

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  • Monday, Apr 18 2016

    Sections do tend to go from easy to hard, but it's usually not a straightforward linear progression. Question 1 isn't necessarily the easiest, and question 25 isn't necessarily the most difficult. I personally find that the hardest questions are usually around 3/4 of the way through a section.

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