Or how do you decide whether to proceed without writing out your game boards (and write out game boards for separate questions)? Any advice appreciated - thanks guys!
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So far, I've tried circling all transition words (ex: but, however, therefore) and important words that specify the author's viewpoint, but I've found myself pressed for time and each time I go to circle a word, I lose focus on what I am reading and find it difficult to grasp it all.
For my most recent pre-test, I tried reading without annotating/circling and found that my score improved, only by a little. Would you recommend annotating? Does anyone just read the passage and go straight to the questions?
Thanks!
Hi @ thanks so much for your offer!!
Heres an example, Preptest 64 Section 1 question 13:
[removed - please do not post sections from the LSAT on the forums!]
I answered B but D is correct. I guess I focused on the study too much? I though that because many were previously injured, they would have more difficulty to perform jogging and could somehow produce more injuries? I realize my reasoning is quite flawed but I still don't see why D is correct.
Hi! I'm having some major troubles with assumption and "which will weaken the argument" questions...any tips would REALLY be appreciated at this point!
For assumption questions, I know that if the answer is false and the argument falls apart, then that answer is correct but I can't really seem to have enough time to do that for every response.
For weaken the argument questions, I'm not sure if I'm mistakenly focusing on the premises and should be focusing on just the arguments instead. I know I should be looking to destroy the relationship between the premises and the arguments, but I'm finding it difficult.
Again, many thanks in advance for any tips/advice!
@ thank you for going through that response - it was actually quite helpful! its also quite a relief to know that someone else got it wrong too!