Hi! It's pretty simple and straightforward. They give you a scenario with a choice and you argue for one of the options. I think I just searched youtube (nothing specifically memorable) In my opinion it was a complete waste of time, lol. It's so simple and we have so many other opportunities to showcase out writing and reasoning during the application process and LSAT. But seriously, don't stress. It's a piece of cake. You can make some notes, you get spell check and 35 minutes to make your point. You'll rock it!
I actually was having similar questions. I took a look at several old writing prompts and they are very brief. So clearly we must be able to bring in outside information as long as we clearly state in our argument the information so that there are no missing necessary assumptions or anything. So, as long as we are making a "good argument," the sky is the limit?
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Hi! It's pretty simple and straightforward. They give you a scenario with a choice and you argue for one of the options. I think I just searched youtube (nothing specifically memorable) In my opinion it was a complete waste of time, lol. It's so simple and we have so many other opportunities to showcase out writing and reasoning during the application process and LSAT. But seriously, don't stress. It's a piece of cake. You can make some notes, you get spell check and 35 minutes to make your point. You'll rock it!
I actually was having similar questions. I took a look at several old writing prompts and they are very brief. So clearly we must be able to bring in outside information as long as we clearly state in our argument the information so that there are no missing necessary assumptions or anything. So, as long as we are making a "good argument," the sky is the limit?
https://blog.powerscore.com/lsat/the-ultimate-guide-to-the-lsat-writing-sample/
This was the best resource I came across
Thank you all for the help!!