I read an article on LSAT HACKS making the case to re-read the rules 4 times as per the below guidelines:
1] To understand the game.
2] To draw.
3] To check for mistakes and look for deductions.
4] To eliminate answers on the first question. (if it’s an “acceptable order” question)
Just curious what everyone here thinks of this advice? This isn't JY's method of course (and I definitely prefer JY's method) but I'm curious as to the merit behind the concept of rereading. I personally read through and diagram at the same time, and I don't check for errors (I also don't edit my essays because I like to live life on the edge LOL) but seriously what are your thoughts on rereading rules? Do you do it? Why or why not?
Comments
Obviously you'll need to read them again for an acceptable situation question but that is still separate from your original setup methodology and those questions are not always there so it seems silly to put in a list like this.
Mike Kim talks about reading everything first to get a feel for things and then going back to start diagramming. I tend to float somewhere in between the approaches of Mike and JY so my approach shifts based on the stimulus which I find helpful as I can speed up or slow down based on the scenario. While I like to have consistent methods, I also like to maintain flexibility so I can adjust my strategies as needed. Whatever you find works for you, I'd stick with that.
I can pretty much tell what "type" of game I'm dealing with right off the bat but in case I'm not sure, then I read the whole set-up. If it's just an ordering game, dude, you know what you're dealing with. Dive in. If it's a weird one or there is something weird going on with the rules (I suppose glance at them up front most of the time), then I might read the whole thing, then read again as I'm diagramming it, and then I do always double check each rule and put a mark by it when I've confirmed I've notated it exactly as I should have.
The first read is obviously non-negotiable. You have to read the game to understand the situation.
The read to check your diagram before you proceed into the questions is also fairly non-negotiable in my opinion. It's the easiest way to ensure that you haven't missed any rules and that you haven't mistakenly inverted an ordering rule or something silly like that.
The 'read' for the purposes of the acceptability question is how most people tackle that question anyway. Pick a rule, apply it, eliminate choices, repeat. I wouldn't really even consider this a 'read', honestly.
The only real discrepancy I see here is whether you mash together Graeme's #1 and #2 into a combined read-and-diagram step, or if you separate them out and read first, then diagram (keeping in mind that your diagramming will be helped out speed-wise by the fact that you've already read the rules once). And honestly, even if you separate them, I don't think that's more than 15 seconds or so of extra reading time. If saving 15 seconds per game will make or break your score, you've got bigger issues.
First I read through and diagram rules as I read. Occasionally if I'm a little shaky or pressed for time this exposes me to the risk of skipping over a rule (ie eyes go up and down on the page). I think the best way to mitigate this is to use the "finger method" http://7sage.com/lsat_explanations/lsat-23-section-1-game-1/
Then if the game is "tough" or if I feel I need more time with the rules, I re-read the rules and double check with the rules I wrote out initially
From here I go to inferences and my game setup
Lastly, I move on to the questions and usually re-read from the text of the question for the acceptable question situation