I'm curious to know what people think about skipping over answer choices if a really attractive answer presents itself early. So, say it's a Strengthen question, you immediately see the gap and prephrase, and then answer choice A is exactly what you were looking for. I see two ways to handle this. The first is to select A, move on, and pocket the extra 20-30 seconds it would have taken to eliminate B-E. The second is to do your due diligence and eliminate the other answers anyway in order to avoid what seems like a really easy trap. I'm never quite sure what to do when I run into this. Is there an official 7Sage orthodoxy addressing this? What do y'all do?
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In my experience with the test and speaking with others, the LSAT is largely a skills based test. It's one full of patterns.
With that as a backdrop, if you encounter a problem in which you recognize the pattern/trick and are able to prephrase and find your answer choice, I say go for it.
I figure if you are unsure, circle it and make your way back to it.
But this is a good question, would love more input from others.
@Micaela_OVO @megsvyas_OVO @"Accounts Playable"
Edit: I'd also say, though, if you practice by skipping answer choices on ones you know, make sure to still do that on the actual test. I got burned by that on dec. test, figured since it was the real test I had to check every answer choice and think about them on every question and really messed up my timing.
I kind of expected what you said to emerge as the consensus. I imagine the difficulty there is in self gauging one's own comfort/skill level. I think it's probably a good strategy to at least try out in PT, and then BR will probably expose if it was a good idea or not.
Also, reading back, 20-30 seconds is probably way too much time to take to eliminate wrong answers. So I dunno, maybe that's more like 10-20? but still a lot of time once you start stacking up 6-7+ of these.
That's definitely where I was before. I'm uneasy skipping over anything. Then I came across a question on which I was just so utterly confident on that I just knew. I went ahead and read everything and confirmed that my answer was right, but I just saw everything on that question with such clarity, it got me thinking. I feel like I'm really starting to coalesce all of the curriculum into a truly effective, holistic offensive, and that's so new and exciting I just want to adapt it as far as I can.
To qualify that, I will add that I have been burned once or twice using that method. During review, I found the correct answer to be an answer that I would have definitely picked had I read it during the timed PT. To avoid this, I always circle any question that I went on "hunt mode" for and come back to it at the end to eliminate the other answers. Hope you find a method that works for you!
I generally finish LR with 5ish minutes to spare, so for me personally I don't feel that the few seconds saved would be worth the risk. That balance would be different for different people, and if I were consistently rushing through the last few questions I might consider this strategy for the first few.
Thank y’all for responding, I think this has been a really constructive thread, for me anyway. I think my major takeaway is really to just get to where I’m finishing in 30 minutes and don’t worry about it. But if ever I’m losing control of the section, maybe think about it, but proceed with caution, and at own risk.