10 comments

  • Sunday, Dec 10 2017

    @6400 said:

    In the beginning, I flashcarded the valid and invalid argument forms as well as the logical indicators for each group.

    Same. This worked very well for learning and instilling these very important concepts!

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  • Sunday, Dec 10 2017

    I did flashcards for general flaws and that helped a ton with several different question types. For example, being versed on an analogy flaw would help you not only recognize that an analogy is present in a str question, but it would also tell you that you must str the analogy.

    0
  • Sunday, Dec 10 2017

    If you are just starting out, I would flash card question stems, valid/invalid argument forms, conditional logic indicators, quantifiers, flaw types...

    I found this on a discussion post a while back: https://quizlet.com/LetsHigh5/folders/lsat-info-strategy-stack/sets

    Hope that helps!

    1
  • Saturday, Dec 09 2017

    @pcainti665 said:

    I cut out hard questions in LR with the questions and stem on the front and the AC on the back, with small explanations of why each was right/wrong. I had to use like size 8 font sometimes, but I have a collection of hard LR questions that I can use on the go. To constantly drive home points and issues the harder questions give me.

    Oh. I like this. I'm stealing it.

    and yeah. Conditional logic, logical indicators, Or/Not Both Rules, Bi-conditional indicators.

    I use quizlet for some.

    https://quizlet.com/join/PmJJVPXFj

    0
  • Saturday, Dec 09 2017

    In the beginning, I flashcarded the valid and invalid argument forms as well as the logical indicators for each group.

    1
  • Saturday, Dec 09 2017

    @pcainti665 said:

    I cut out hard questions in LR with the questions and stem on the front and the AC on the back, with small explanations of why each was right/wrong. I had to use like size 8 font sometimes, but I have a collection of hard LR questions that I can use on the go. To constantly drive home points and issues the harder questions give me.

    Towards the end of my preparation, I would simply take pictures of LR questions I answered incorrectly and browse them whenever the mood struck.

    0
  • Saturday, Dec 09 2017

    I cut out hard questions in LR with the questions and stem on the front and the AC on the back, with small explanations of why each was right/wrong. I had to use like size 8 font sometimes, but I have a collection of hard LR questions that I can use on the go. To constantly drive home points and issues the harder questions give me.

    0
  • Saturday, Dec 09 2017

    Question stems and indicator words are the main things I flash-carded. I also kept a bunch of note cards handy to detail some of the trickier stuff I found on the LSAT.

    0
  • Saturday, Dec 09 2017

    I occasionally go through my flashcards for conditional logic, but otherwise don't really flashcard anything.

    I do, however, go back to questions I've flagged from the CC/old PTs and attempt them again -- especially those tricky 4/5-star questions I still can't wrap my head around.

    I know some people do something similar by cutting out questions they struggled with and keeping them in a pile that they go through when they have some down time.

    1
  • Saturday, Dec 09 2017

    Flashcarding :open_mouth: ....?

    https://www.dailydot.com/wp-content/uploads/a2a/a4/blondlady-1.jpg

    I personally never flashcarded for the LSAT, but if I did I would probably use them to drill question stems or some conditional logic drills.

    1

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