Self-study
naomirichardson6778516
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- Apr 2025
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LSAT
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Hey! The thing that most helped with me was looking at the rules and keeping them into account for each question. So if you have a could be true or must be true - odds are the answer is going to be one of the options with a solid rule - not a floater.
So lets say, A and E both have conditions and C doesnt (AKA C is a floater) when you look at the question and it says what could be or must be the 3rd position, I find the LSAT makers wouldnt make it easy and have the answer be C. Most of the time its going to be answer A or E. So try filtering those out. Saves time! Also - if the answer has one option come up multiple times, so A in postion 1, A in position 3 etc. Chances are, the answer is probably something to do with A, now you just have to figure out if spot 1 or 3 makes more sense.
I hope this helps and if you are confused at all please feel free to comment back or message! :) Good luck!