Excuse me while I vent and ask for encouragement.
During my diagnostic, I did fairly well on LR and RC and totally failed LG (70-80% correct on LR and RC and 27% on LG...) 4 months later... I'm really not fairing that much better with LG. I've completed the CC months ago, have been employing the method that many of us use, trying to go through every LG and keeping track of my time on a spreadsheet. I felt like I was getting a lot better and recently during a full PT I completed 3 games with almost all questions correct and I got through about half of the last game. However, on my most recent PT, I just completely failed LG, doing hardly any better than my diagnostic (although I greatly improved on my LR and RC scores).
Anyway, I don't really know what I'm asking for. I know what to do. I'm going to revisit the CC and keep trying to get through all of the LG before test day (Dec). I guess I'm just hoping others have had a similar experience and could offer encouragement that they eventually had a moment when it "clicked". I just don't understand why I'm not getting any better. I understand the foundations. I follow JY when watching the videos. It's just that when I'm confronted with some variation that I haven't seen before, I totally freak and want to give up.
Comments
Also,
I would really recommend exhausting a game of all possible solutions. What I mean by that, is that there are generally different approaches to solving a game. I.e. splitting game boards, brute force, solving for all possibilities etc. Try to focus on the games that really got you. Solve them in every way possible. It'll help you see the inner workings of the game and then give you a better idea why the testmakers had to ask the questions they did - if that makes sense.
One thing that I have tried that really gave me a boost is something a little bit out of the box. I have blindfolded myself and had my fiancé read the games to me and I talk her through the set-up/keeping track of pieces/managing inferences. That was what really allowed me to hone in on games. Keeping track of those things in my mind and talking her through the games without looking has forced me to remember everything and juggle these things in my mind in the most efficient way possible to answer the questions. I know it sounds out of the box, it sounds rather bizarre to be honest, but it has worked for me!
*Note here that it is important that my fiancé has almost zero familiarity with the exam, she is going to nursing school. This is important because I don't want someone doing this with me that makes the inferences known, or proceeds with a setup that holds advantages over the one I had in mind.
Try it will an easy game. Try it with PT 2 Game 1.
@"J. Tharp" Repetition and practice is key. If you understand the foundations really all you have to do is find out which kinda game or a particular game that messes you up then kill it. Come back in a few days/weeks and kill it again.
Play around with sections you took already. Especially for games 35 and under. Just with those alone, you be able to recognize patterns better and clean up your sketches. Take 1,2,3,or 4 games undertime, or overtime to take the pressure off and see how you do anyway. Practice skipping methods for games and questions.
When you freak, dont panic. Gain control of the situation by taking a few breaths. Maybe come back later and do a different game. If it's the last game, and it's open ended sometimes you just have to brute force it, but look at where you can save time in the other games. Try and shave time off the easy ones and get under the target time for them.
At one point, before I found 7Sage, I accepted that on the real LSAT I would miss half the LG questions and decided that meant I needed to go -0 on LR and RC. I literally was so bad that only missing -12 was a goal of mine when I began prepping in June.
One day I decided to check out a couple of the free 7Sage videos on YouTube. I eventually signed up for a course and spent most of July fool proofing games. It finally clicked for me after I spent 3 weeks fool proofing every game from PTs 1-38 multiple times. I was painfully slow at first, then I got a bit faster. Some days I would get so discouraged, feel like an idiot, and bang my head against my desk. How could I get an A in a college level Calc class and not figure out "games"?
I found that when I started approaching LG like a math equation I began to do a lot better. Just follow the steps that the course taught me. At this point, I knew how to diagram the games, but answering the questions is what I needed the work on. I began keeping set ups and just working through the questions multiple times for certain games that gave me trouble.
Part of me began taking getting better at these dumb games as a challenge. After a while, it almost began to feel like an actual game or puzzle. Dare I say, fun?
When I began doing this I realized that one way I could save a lot of time (I'm talking shaving 1-3 minutes off per game) was to be smart when attacking the answers. I kind of began pre-phrasing LG questions to an extent. I knew that LSAC will often exploit the key inferences in a game. So keeping this in mind, I focused on answer choices that contained the key inferences. I no longer needed to go through every answer choices or brute force nearly as much as I had been doing. I would laser focus in on a couple and surely enough with some practice I got good at seeing which ones to even consider. It didn't always work, but more times than not it did.
Between this and memorizing the inferences from fool proofing hundreds of games over the course of almost a month, I got much better and arguably just as important, more confident with games.
You can do it!
@"Alex Divine" @nanchito @David3389 @draj0623