Hi all!
I am crunching through the logic game bundle, and wondering if it is worth mastering a few of the strange/old questions that JY mentions we will no longer find on the new LSAT? I understand that I can sit, and probably reason / learn my way to the right answer, but I figure I'd rather spend 20-30 minutes on trying to cover ground (deeply) and gather more experience on different inferences / game setups.
I am thinking that it is more worth my time to crunch through and master the ones that are representative of the logic games we will find on the new LSAT.
Thoughts?
Comments
Personally, the circular setup isn't so much a problem for me... but I can understand that there is more good than bad with doing old weird logic games that deviate from the "common" LG.
I like the idea that exposing myself to them will increase my flexibility with diagramming.
To do good on the LSAT, it is enough to just tackle the most commonly-seen setups, the ones people refer to as "representative". To do great on it, you have to know how to put the pieces together when the setup is unfamiliar. For example, nobody had ever seen a game like the timepiece game in 73; even the closest analogs weren't very close to the mark. So how did some people not miss any questions in that game? Because their mental flexibility and approach gave them the tools to solve a question that they had never seen before. Being able to scrape together a setup from an unfamiliar situation is a skill. Being able to figure out an unfamiliar game is a skill. They are skills that rely on your ability to rummage around in your toolbox and figure out the appropriate tools to use, because your explicit memory will not help you.
You need to learn the 'common' game types cold. No question about that. If you haven't, I strongly suggest you ignore the 'odd' games completely until you've mastered the common ones. But you have to make sure you're learning them the right way - picking up the cues for when you're supposed to do something and understanding why, not just memorizing the setups.
But I was worried I might be missing out on some sort of pattern recognition thing by not cramming the LGs into 2-3 weeks. Any thoughts?
Classy!