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Reading the questions out loud helps me to catch convoluted language. It slows me down a bit, but my accuracy has increased substantially once I started reading aloud.
It's been really helpful for me too. For almost every question I can POE it down to two answer choices & from there, it's not too bad to parse out which answer choice is better.
If I get the question wrong I watch the video, but if I get it right & I still have a question about the stimulus or a question about a specific answer choice I'll find the part in the summary that mentions it and read it. That answers my question 95% of the time & is often faster than skipping through the entire video for just a single piece of information.
This is why their original scores aren't included. I have a strong feeling the scores she didn't like were in the 160s, which isn't very motivating for people in the 140s and 150s.
You actually did answer the question in a perfect amount of time. The LSAT logic reasoning section can have a maximum of 26 questions and you have 35 minutes to complete it which means you should be spending around 1:20 per question. If you get below 1:20 you did a good job no matter what 7Sage tries to tell you :)
I feel like it's not quite accurate as it only takes the correct answers from like actual LSAT scores, not practice tests or drills. I'm taking an in-person LSAT prep course at my college and the amount of people who get the questions incorrect is closer to 1/4-1/3 at least, unlike the 6-8% you see on 7Sage.
#feedback Every single problem should have a Quick View section at the top of the video so I can look at the different answer choices before viewing the video. It's ridiculous that I have to skip over halfway through the video just to see what answer choice C says.