So I was reading the LSAC practice prompt and was wondering if I could answer with "This plan is currently the most effective strategy, but eventually they should expand to a national strategy once regional expansion is established." Here is the prompt: https://www.lsac.org/lsat/lsat-prep/practice-test/writing-sample-topic

Could anyone let me know if this is a factor that would hurt me and my argument or if it's okay to answer any which way.

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4 comments

  • Thursday, Jun 10 2021

    https://blog.powerscore.com/lsat/the-ultimate-guide-to-the-lsat-writing-sample/

    This is a good guide.

    1
  • Wednesday, Jun 09 2021

    Yeah, just pick one to argue is better. You can acknowledge the other argument and its pros, but then prove it wrong by trumping it with your chosen argument.

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  • Wednesday, Jun 09 2021

    I would not write an argument for both sides. The instructions are fairly clear to only make an argument for one choice, so I think attempting to do both, could hurt you. It may be a good or valid paper/argument, but it wouldn't be following the instructions.

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  • Wednesday, Jun 09 2021

    No you can only make an argument for one or the other

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