I've heard arguments for both. I'm naturally inclined to read the argument before the question stem but I wrote the 12/5 LSAT today and probably got one of my worst scores ever. Since I will probably be re-writing, I'm looking at switching up my strategy for a better performance on the next go 'round.
What's your approach?
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I've read most high scorers read the stimulus first but I do much better with the question stem. For reference, I am currently PTing ~88 raw score, which varies but it's usually around 169. Good luck!
Regardless, if I were you, I'd give in a shot and see if it helps.
A great example may be the main conclusion questions. Once you know you're looking for the main conclusion, sometimes all you have to do is look for that "But these scientists are wrong", then just skim through the rest of the stimulus just to be safe and go right at the answer choice that best rephrases that. Those questions can really take like 20 seconds, while going in and reading the whole thing, then reading the question stem, then most likely having to go back to the stimulus just to verify what the conclusion is, will more than likely take more than that.
1) You want to know question types, so you should immediately be able to say "oh this is a ____ question, so I need to do the strategy for a _____ question."
2) You're going to read more actively if you have a purpose - so you're going to focus on different parts of the argument for different question types. In my humble opinion, you'll be much more efficient and effective.