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• this encourages a deeper analysis because it helps to imagine different viewpoints
• frontload: spend as much time possible on understanding the passage
Connect back
• to previous paragraphs
• previous parts of longer sentences (especially those with modifiers or ---.....---)
• pay close attention to referential phrases and anything that gave you pause
How to approach questions
• carefully read question stems
• think of ACs as contenders: treat each AC as not 100% correct, not 100% incorrect
• rarely go back and reread: unless it's a few seconds to verify some detail because sometimes our brain registers a word or phrase when skimming parts of a paragraph then we see an AC that includes that word/phrase but ends up being a trap AC. our brains find a way to make wrong ACs sound right
Active reading
• use examples: picture things in your head, or as JY says, flex your imagination (especially for sciences passages)
• engage with the passage right from the get-go
• having a structural low-res summary is always helpful, but memory retention is also important: your ability to recall detail can save time
Strategies on timing
• don't reread too much if down to two and it's a 50/50 tossup - if you can't get it in 5 seconds, flag and move on
• use "ctrl + f" as last resort
And most importantly: be careful and slow when reading; be aggressive when choosing and knocking out ACs
I've found @Christopherr 's RC sessions to be really helpful and I think this might be useful to those who couldn't make it!
Comments
This is awesome! Thanks for doing this @chaplin___ !
what is your time limit on passage
@chaplin___ thank you so much for posting these helpful notes! I did not attend this session, but am looking forward @Christopherr 's A/b session tomorrow night.
Question- you mentioned using ctrl+F. Is this legal and even doable on the digital LSAT? I've never thought about this. Probably because I've been practicing on an ipad up until recently. Thank you!
Yes you can do this during the LSAT Flex--I did it during the October one and it was fine. I've read multiple places that using it is allowed and it caused no issues for me when I used it.
@WouldRatherBeEating thanks for the quick reply! This is blowing my mind right now. I can imagine someone getting too dependent on it. It's good to know in case of emergency though.
Holy shit ctrl F would be hella useful.
wow I never even thought about ctrl F tbh.