31 comments

  • Edited 4 days ago

    I kid you not-- this is just what made conditional logic click for me. Conditional logic has been a weak spot, but the visuals and the ability to move things around and see the intersections and the following implications (what must be true, could be true/false, and must be false) as a result just did something magical for my brain. I did a question on lawyers, bankers, and athletes (spoilers) and did the squares-- made it so simple. 7Sage you did it again. Big thanks!!!

    4
  • 4 days ago

    Can we get one for sufficient->necessary? This was great and really engaging which helped make the material stick

    2
  • This was fun.

    2
  • 4 days ago

    Wait i love this! Y'all are in the midst of some kind of renaissance or something!

    4
  • Kevin_Lin Instructor
    4 days ago

    We just added 6 more questions and changed the default rectangle positions to add some extra challenge!

    3
  • Edited Thursday, Jun 4

    Can you make more!?

    This helped a lot- I'm a very visual learner which is why the diagramming alone with just arrows & trying to remember those rules tends to be pretty hard for me for conditional reasoning. It giving you a real time check/feedback too to be sure you're doing it correctly is fantastic.

    2
  • Thursday, Jun 4

    This was great, it helped me a lot!

    1
  • Wednesday, Jun 3

    Games are what help me best understand and digest concepts. Please continue putting out more material similar to this!

    3
  • Wednesday, Jun 3

    Super cool! If you put out similar stuff to this, please keep posting it on the main page.

    3
  • Tuesday, Jun 2

    This was great! Using games like this is so helpful as visual learner and helps to change how I view the logic

    1
  • Edited Thursday, Jun 4

    Love this! Would it be possible to create something similar for conditional and causal relationships as well? Additionally , maybe another workshop-style game focused on diagramming could help reinforce those concepts.

    4
    Tuesday, Jun 2

    @LegalKJ Agree! Having something for conditional and causal relationship would be of a great help!

    3
  • Tuesday, Jun 2

    I’m a visual learner, but I can’t see images in my head (aphantasia) - this is super helpful to drive the relationships home.

    1
  • Loved this drill! Would love to see more of this. Skill Builder Games for different quantifiers would be amazinggg too

    1
  • Edited Tuesday, Jun 2

    Hello, I was waiting for it!! awesome, thank you!!

    1
  • Tuesday, Jun 2

    Seemed fun but found the current questions/format too easy. Would be nice to have an option that hides the %? But I guess you can just do regular questions like this. Either way its a cool feature!

    1
  • Tuesday, Jun 2

    Awesome!

    1
  • Tuesday, Jun 2

    this was so fun i loved it !

    2
  • Tuesday, Jun 2

    This is awesome! Please expand it to include practice with real questions. I use visuals to help me with these questions, but I can get bogged down sometimes in parsing out the premises vs. conclusion in longer a longer stimulus.

    3
  • Tuesday, Jun 2

    this is awesome for people who benefit from visuals

    4
  • Edited Tuesday, Jun 2

    This is such a great feature! As someone who relies heavily on interactive visuals for learning, I drew out diagrams to internalize quantifiers. An interactive version like this would’ve sped my understanding up. Even now, with me being more confident with quantifiers, going through the lesson was helpful for seeing how playing around with the rectangles changed compliance with the premises and the conclusion. I’d love to see interactive visuals like this for other concepts!

    4
  • Tuesday, Jun 2

    Incredible!

    1
  • Tuesday, Jun 2

    this is great!!

    1
  • Tuesday, Jun 2

    I have been looking for something visual like this to help reinforce logical thinking and supplement it visually, as I am a very visual thinker. This is great!

    1
  • Tuesday, Jun 2

    This is a very cool idea. Thanks for making this!

    1
  • Tuesday, Jun 2

    I love this! Will there be more like this for example for diagramming? I think the instructional design of this activity was great!

    1

Confirm action

Are you sure?