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Hey 7Sagers,
I've been studying for at least a year now But for some reason I have so much trouble trying to correctly answer Assumption, Sufficient Assumption and Necessary Assumption questions. I have gone over the curriculum and been utilizing negation tests, conditional logic, etc. But I am simply not improving. Does anyone have a certain method that works for them? Or am I doomed? I have been scoring 16 questions on LR sections but that would be higher if I got more Assumption questions correct. Any thoughts?
Admin edit: Please don't yell! The admins scare easily. (Caps from title removed.)
Comments
Learn the valid argument forms. For sufficient assumptions, you want to be a fine tuned machine. You want to develop a mechanical process @"Cant Get Right" compiled one on another thread, I'll post it below
Hmm... Are you having trouble understanding the logic behind what you're looking for with NA/SA questions? For instance, do you fully understand the difference between necessity and sufficiency?
In any case, you aren't doomed. If you do understand those things, I would recommend the same thing Jknauf wrote above. Learning valid argument forms and utilizing a strategy like @"Cant Get Right" outlined in the past is your best bet.
Just out of curiosity, what other question types are giving you trouble?
I was the same way as you for assumption questions. A part of the difficulty in these questions are understanding the stimulus. Make sure to slow down and fully understand. (As well as all the other advice given above).
Identifying the elements is usually the most important part for me, and going back to the quizzes on sufficient assumptions helped with both.
Necessary assumptions are a complete horror show. The answer is often unpredictable. The bridging questions are usually easy, but the blocking questions are a nightmare.
Thanks a lot! Yeah I have been memorizing the valid argument forms but for some reason I often "bridge the gap by adding the wrong piece of the puzzle" to get to the right answer choice. It's difficult to explain but sometimes I would get a question wrong because I think I'm piecing some conditional statements in the wrong order,place, or direction.
An example would be LSAT 35 S.4 Question 14
Marian Anderson, the famous contralto, did not take success for granted. We know this because Anderson had to struggle early in life, and anyone who has to struggle early in life is able to keep a good perspective on the world.
A) Anyone who succeeds takes for granted.
Anyone who is able to keep a good perspective on the world does not take success for granted.
C) Anyone who is able to keep a good perspective on the world has to struggle early in life.
D) Anyone who does not take success for granted has to struggle early in life.
E)Anyone who does not take success for granted is able to keep a good perspective on the world.
LEGEND:
ASL = Anyone who had to struggle early in life
PKG = Keep a good perspective
DTSG = Does not take success for granted
The argument basically sets up as
ASL --> PKG
The correct answer choice is B. I got it wrong. B looks like this.
PKG --> DTSG
And you basically would have to add this answer choice to the end of the first conditional statement above. And it would look like this:
ASL --> PKG --> DTSG
My mistake would be something like picking either D or E since DTSG could point to either the ASL or PKG. Basically I would piece the argument incorrectly because I think to myself, “maybe I can bridge the gap by saying all DTSG are ASL or PKG. .” And then suddenly it just happens to be easier than that where I just have to add the DTSG at the end of the first conditional statement.
Is this a reasoning error of mine because I don’t fully understand the Valid Argument Forms? I’m not sure if this makes sense. I tend to put pieces in the wrong places still.
I guess I'm having trouble setting up which conditional statements piece together. But I fee llike I am strong in knowing my logical indicators. And to be honest know. I don't fully understand those types of questions I suppose. I know one is sufficient in "bridging the gap" and in Necessary Assumption Questions,I know I need to find the one that is REQUIRED for the argument to work and I can use the negation test but I still end up getting those wrong... Other question types I usually get wrong are MBT and Inference questions
Thank you! I'll be sure to slow down and try to understand completely what I am reading
I feel the same about N.A. questions! I tend to negate the wrong answer choice and that kills me during Practice tests.
@randolphportugal have you watched the webinars on SA and NA? They helped me tremendously. I think it was just the language that he used. For some reason things like "trigger" and "just enough" stuck out to me and made me fully understand the task for these question types. Sometimes you just need a different perspective to completely grasp it.