User Avatar
azntroy103626
Joined
Apr 2025
Subscription
Free
User Avatar
azntroy103626
Sunday, Nov 04 2018

Do it in three waves. First wave I do questions I can easily do without any notes. So principle, weakening, strengthening, etc. After I do the super quick ones, I focus on the questions that require mapping. So assumptions, any questions with nested rules, or the "some, many, most" questions . After that I finish the ones that eat up alot of time because the AMT of reading . So like.... Parallel reasoning. Practice creating your own hierarchy of questions

0
User Avatar
azntroy103626
Thursday, Oct 04 2018

thanks so much!!

0
User Avatar

Wednesday, Sep 26 2018

azntroy103626

What type of questions do you guys skip?

After practicing some timed tests, I've finally accepted that I won't be able to do every single problem and have to learn to give up some problems. So what type of problems do you guys skip? Like what's your criteria to skip a problem and how long does it take you to make that decision?

0
User Avatar
azntroy103626
Thursday, Jun 14 2018

remember the example of the basketball player, being the best basketball player? must be assumed means it has to be true or else the argument fails. so lets use averaging 100 points a game. does this have to be true to be considered the best basketball player? no, you can average 99, or 101 points and thatll most likely still define the best bball player. or you can even average 0 points but average 100 blocks or something a game. there are multiple ways to attain the status of best basketball player so scoring 100 fails the "must be true" portion. but if the question asks what must be true, its asking for a quality that the player must have in order to be in the conversation of best basketball player. so what must be true? must be alive, must be able to breathe, must be able to stand, etc

0

Confirm action

Are you sure?