So I did some serious BR review and noticed that during practice (both timed and untimed) I misread the question, sometimes multiple times, before ultimately getting the question wrong out of my inability to understand the stimulus. Is there anything specific I can do to tighten my understanding of these questions? I've been studying for a few months now, so I don't know if continual drilling is improving carefulness.
Thanks.
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This video may also be helpful for you:
http://7sage.com/lesson/lr-question-stem-grouped-by-direction-of-support/
When it comes to reading LR questions, I've derived a very formulaic system.
Step 1: Read the stem and understand whether you will be reading a set of facts or an actual argument. (approx 1/3 of LR questions will be a set of facts and approx 2/3 will contain an argument).
IF IT IS A SET OF FACTS:
These questions should be gimmes for the most part. Generally they break down into two general situations.
Situation 1: only a small portion of the stimulus will be relevant (as little as one sentence out of the 4 or 5 that are in the stimulus. These can be somewhat time consuming since the relevant portion of the stimulus represents only a small percentage of the total stimulus and often demands revisiting the stimulus.
Situation 2: the fact sets will relate to one another and form a logical chain. These are often very easy to pre-phrase and answer quickly.
IF IT IS AN ARGUMENT:
In these stimuli, all content can be categorized into one of three different categories:
1. background/contextual information (sometimes you need it to understand the stimulus better, other times it is completely irrelevant and can cause inexperienced test takers to waste time deciphering their meaning.
2. premises and intermediate conclusions that support the main conclusion
3. main conclusion
If nothing else, after your first read through of the stimulus you should be able to have identified the argument's overall conclusion. Then locate the support for the conclusion and immediately force yourself to remember that the premises will NEVER adequately support the conclusion. This is where it is CRITICAL to go through the beginning of JY's course where he goes over all the grammar lessons (referential phrasing, embedded clauses, language key terms that indicate premises and conclusions, etc.) This will be key to accurately reading the stimuli in a manner that is expedient without sacrificing comprehension. The better you are able to see the conclusion and the premises that support that conclusion, and ignore/not waste time trying to understand the irrelevant portions of the stimulus, the quicker you will be able to eliminate wrong answer choices. So much of timing in the LR section is being able to realize when you no longer have to read a loser answer choice. You want to realize as quickly as possible when an answer choice has no chance of being correct (for example in principle questions when the stimulus conclusion is presented as a sufficient condition in an answer choice).
Hope this helps you! Best of luck.
Srsly though great summary/analysis.
Bulletproof coffee, folks. MCT's are good for the body and the mind. Eat some chia seeds. Drink some alkaline water (no, you don't drink enough unless you're a hydration freak—you know who you are). Full fat, high protein. Keep fiber intake at a minimum of 25g a day. Just eat real food. These things sustain brainpower, keep energy levels consistent, and promote gut health. Grab some kombucha while you're at it (but make sure it's the kind without added cane sugar—I did NOT say seek out fermented/pro-biotic soda pop).
Oh, and bacon.