Suppose you chose A, then chose B during blind review and it turns out the answer choice was C. How do you guys approach this situation? These are the questions JY claims we don't understand and are a good candidate to skip. I'm curious to know folks personal approach (e.g., flash cards, discussion, tutor, etc.).

0

3 comments

  • Saturday, Aug 30 2014

    from above, "cut it out, keep it in your pocket, and review the question every so often" is JYs suggestion :D

    1
  • Thursday, Aug 28 2014

    http://classic.7sage.com/the-blind-review-how-to-correctly-prep-for-lsat-part-6/

    ^He doesn't say to skip them completely, but rather that they would be candidates for skipping (for time-saving purposes) while writing a timed test. Presumably you would come back to them when you're done the rest of the q's in the section. I think during practice you should try to understand them thoroughly, posting about them etc.

    Hope this helps!

    0
  • Thursday, Aug 28 2014

    Did he really say to skip them? I mean, I personally just try my best to understand them. Once I think I do understand them, I then save them, mix them up with other questions I had trouble with and try to attack them again at a later date. *shrugs*

    1

Confirm action

Are you sure?