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I noticed the video maps each condition to separately lead to being tired. Why wouldn't it be correct to map the chain of conditions as: loses things --> tired --> irritable, basically the tired part is the connection btwn the other two factors. what i didn't her is that, even tho we can't assume she's tired based on her yawning, wouldn't her losing te keys establish that she's tired? And isn't that the only sufficient condition to her being irritable?
@Juan2025 It's technically grammatically correct to use singular they/their in most contexts, I've been taught by professors in legal classes that on legal documents, using "they/their" when referring to one person can lead to confusion or ambiguity, unless specifying beforehand that it's their preferred pronoun.
@Amber_n_9 For me it opened up to an imbedded webpage of this: https://coda.io/d/Law-School-Admissions-Checklist-and-Results-Tracker-Template_dQzXlYv91Tj/Checklist_sukksQJE?utm_campaign=embed&utm_medium=web&utm_source=QzXlYv91Tj#_luPokEJu
@breezyprabahar944 Yes, it's usually taken June-December of the year before you start law school. So for example, people taking the LSAT in June-Dec 2025 are applying for law school year starting in fall 2026. But tbh, you can essentially take the LSAT as early as you want, it's valid for five years.
@imawalrusdotcom859 If you have enough time before applications, one idea is to take a brief college course at your local community college. Preferably in a subject that's relevant to law school like legal studies, writing, criminology, history, political sicence, etc. And then ask that professor for a reference letter. It's also a good idea to have a reference letter from any jobs or other professional experiences that are more recent and relevant to you current life than academic sources from 8 years ago.
@saajanhopton You should try emailing old professors and ask if they'd be willing to write you a letter through it's been four years. ask them if you could setup a quick virtual meeting with them to remind them about who you were in their class, your work/assignments, etc.
@carlidwhitehead746 I'd say moreover means another supporting premise, or even a premise in support ofa premise. Basically the sentence after moreover can be connected as the last part of the chain: (coffee bean price up^ --> coffee cup price up ^ --> coffee sales down --> profit down.)
#help While I understand the explanation for the correct answer, I had a very different interpretation of this answer choice. I took "varying contexts" to mean different materials. Couldn't paint be considered a different "context" and be helpful to teach students? The author seems to think not, that learning about color through only the context of paper would be helpful. Honestly, I think this answer choice is written too ambiguously.