Subscription pricing
I find that I really really hate humanities passages ( and do poorly on them) and sometimes law passages but really really enjoy science passages. What do you guys do to remain focused on passage types that un interest you or just a boring passage in general? Is their anything I can read to improve my humanities section. Seems like with humanities I seem to have to re-read sentences a lot.
1
19 comments
I didn't notice either!
Oh ha I didnt even notice.
Lol this thread is so old—guaranteed these folks are all in law school now and definitely not reading the forums :)
Do you still highlight the same things, or did you change your method? I know someone else that switched to highlighting and thinks it helped, but they only highlight certain things... I think I would have to increase my speed a bit to be comfortable switching back and forth. But I'd love to hear you share more about how you are using this technique. @jsumlin170
Also having a notation process for RC really helps me stay focused. I highly recommend @nicolemethod! I believe she did a webinar on it.
For RC once I started ignoring subject matter, my score in that section increased substantially (from averaging -8 to -5) because I realized that the subject matter is not important, I do not need to understand it. For example, I did not use to like science passages and would spend a bunch of time getting sucked into trying to understand concepts. Now I read it, I see they are talking about bacteria X, and how it use to do one thing and now they think it is doing another, and bacteria X could be the cure to cancer. I do not need understand what bacteria X is at all.
Is their anything I can read to improve my humanities section. Seems like with humanities I seem to have to re-read sentences a lot.
I completely ignore subject matter and am addicted to reading for reasoning structure. You gotta get in the zone and appreciate the art of argument for what it is: applicable to any topic or subject matter, and intrinsically interesting/value in its own right.
my advice is paraphrasing every individual paragraph. it sounds obvious but it is essentially a TL;DR summary and its less to read.
-2 on RC is great, especially if we're talking about the recent PT60+ tests.
Keep it up.
Great work! RC is arguably the hardest section. If you are hitting -2's on reading comp, you could potentially hit way higher even than your goal, friend. Get those logic games on lockdown and use 7sage to figure out what question types you've gotta focus on!
You're doing awesome.
My last test I only got two wrong on reading comp. thank you all. If I can continue to do that and stop picking extremely dumb answers on LR I'll be ok. I'm within 3 points of my 160 goal score
I have nothing further to comment, except to note my excitement at there being another dinosaur comics fan here on 7sage.
I agree with everything said above, and I'll add that I started using a highlighter for the RC section only and my score dramatically increased (from 14 missed w/o highlighter to only 6 missed with highlighter).
I had previously been using underlining and bracketing techniques for everything. I think highlighting does something for the longer passages that grabs my attention more. There are lots of tips about speed reading online, and using a highlighter to pull out the major terms and phrases mimics a lot of those tips.
Just a suggestion, it may not work for everyone, but try it on your next PT.
Hell yeah :-) awesome jsumlin. And for serious -- even if they aren't interesting to read, the information they present are often super interesting to know :-)
Thank you all a lot. I've been drilling reading comp for the past two days and before I read each passage I say to myself ( let's learn something fun and new) it helps a lot tricking my mind
Both of these answers, totally.
Fake it til you make it.
Personally, I think hacking your own brain is THE key to RC success.
Develop a genuine interest in knowledge. Dwell on the fact that while sinking time into LSAT prep, you are simultaneously learning about a variety of topics, and generally from experts in the field. Enjoy learning and growing.
Tell over passages to someone, if they're willing to listen.
I literally just pretend that I'm fascinated with the topic and really fake enthusiasm about what the author has to say. It actually works and after like a minute you start to believe your own lie.