I have been studying for the LSAT for less than one year and would like to further improve on LR. I have read that many people have learned to identify each question type and apply unique strategies for tackling that particular question type. Currently, I am not employing this method and I am unsure if I will see great results if I learned this technique. If necessary I have no issue putting the time and work in to learning this method, but I am unsure how helpful it will be. If you have used this method, has it had a positive impact for you? Do you believe that learning this method is necessary in order to perform well on LR?
PT Questions
horrisglad139
- Joined
- Apr 2025
- Subscription
- Free
@ said:
How do you approach LR?
I mean, I'm assuming you just go through the section and literally just DO what the question stems says? (you weaken an argument, strengthen one, find a flaw in one, etc.). Learning certain strategies for each question type can definitely help you improve, I think. I know someone who never learned strategies for each question type and is doing amazing on this test. But learning Q type strategies can be really helpful, so go for it!
That is exactly what I'm doing right now. I'm simply answering the question based on what it asks me to do. Perhaps learning how to tackle each question type will help me.