I'm currently working on the logic games bundle. While I've been getting -1 or -2 per game untimed I continue to test every answer choice even after getting an answer just to be sure it's correct. I'm wondering if this will hinder my speed while doing actual timed games. Should I just pick the correct answer and continue or actually double check. At this point I'm focusing on accuracy not speed. Any comments would help. Thank you
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Some Q types (e.g., acceptable situation, CBT/CBF) use POE as the most efficient method; the answer will be last remaining (just move on unless you need to "test" your diagram/rules). For certain Q types (MBT/MBF) you should NOT have to check further. Sometimes if unsure between two answers, test them both (note the difference in checking two possibles rather than EVERY answer). Or failing time management (e.g., 5min left for final game) your score will benefit from moving briskly rather than testing every remaining answer choice. So the rule is not "always or never" but rather "depends" on your confidence and situation.
Of course mindlessly testing every answer choice will negatively affect your timing. Therefore, even if focusing on accuracy at this point, practice identifying which questions require POE and save the 100% testing for a BR afterwards. With unlimited time you should be -0 per game, not -1/-2 per game. Always figure out and fix what you are doing wrong in terms of methodology before proceeding further. You want to reinforce good rather than bad habits, plus wisely use rather than burn precious practice LSATs.
I also recommend you begin timing every game, if only to establish and track your baseline. Start your timer at zero and click stop when you are complete. Track your time (before each BR) and try to do better next time. When this time comes down to acceptable levels (while maintaining accuracy) shift to full timed sections. Repeat this process for timed sections before shifting to timed PTs. This is an evolution rather than a lock-step schedule.
Anyhow, like @"Cant Get Right" has mentioned, trust your set-up. Ideally, you want to spend a fair amount of time up front. In other words, really focus on setting up a top-notch diagram. You'll notice that when you skimp out on the diagram, you end up paying for it on the questions.
Make a solid diagram, double check the diagram/rules if you have to, then jump into the questions. Once you see an answer, pick it.
What I have noticed is that 9/10 times, double checking is just my way of reassuring myself that I got the right answer. And 9/10 times, it ends up being a waste of precious time.
@stepharizona great, sounds like you're on the right track! And speedy POE on LR and RC is also a good strategy.
My understanding is that POE is always used (1) BEFORE final selection in order to avoid attractive-but-wrong choices and allow more time to dial-in on the remaining contenders; and (2) in LR/RC. This is different from using remaining time AFTER completing the section to go back and double-check.
If you understand a question so well (in any context) that you can affirmatively predict/identify/select the 'obviously correct' answer to such a high degree of confidence that you feel actively good about straight up ignoring the other choices and not even bothering to evaluate them, doesn't that also mean you should be capable of de-justifying them quickly if you had to? Because if you're not capable of that, how can you be THAT SURE that you're correct? And if something else does catch your eye and you can't immediately eliminate it, doesn't that warrant some exploration?
Just as relevantly, why does any of that change when you shift from LR/RC to LG? Whatever the argument is for not reading every choice in LG (it takes too long, it's a waste of time once you have your answer, it could confuse you, it tempts you to test everything), couldn't you make those exact same arguments against reading everything in LR/RC? It's not like LR/RC answers are somehow 'less right' than LG answers.
If you choose to pick and go, you're free to do so; just understand that you're making a conscious decision to cut a corner in order to save X amount of time. Depending on what that X is, it may even be worth it from a short-term score-maximization standpoint, and is often practical to do so. But I would humbly suggest that the better (or even parallel) path is to actually work on decreasing that "X" instead of sweeping it under the rug. Timing issues are skills deficits, and you don't close a skills deficit by finding ways to avoid doing what you should be. If you don't have time to check this other answer choice, is it because it's the wrong thing to do or because you're not fluent enough in the logic to do it quickly enough?
For my part, I cannot ever imagine selecting an answer on any section of this test without looking at all 5 choices first.
It occurs to me that there could also potentially be some confusion between "POE" as a question-answering strategy (as in, I have no clue what the right answer is, but I eliminated these other ones so I'll pick this one) and "POE" as a general term (simply eliminating wrong answers as you come across them). I "POE" generally in every question because I eliminate wrong choices as well as affirm the right one, but I don't use the "POE" question-answering strategy except as an absolute last resort. So maybe I'm just interpreting the advice wrong?
You haven't misunderstood anything; that's how JY tells you to treat them. I'm just musing about whether it's the orthodoxy because it's actually theoretically the best way, or if there's something else to it - perhaps just a way to help people develop better habits, on the theory that it's easier to get someone to do something nuanced by getting them used to doing it period and then walking it back slightly instead of trying to get them to the exact right balance the first time around. The arguments against reading all of the LG choices and dealing with them are literally counterarguments for reading all the LR/RC choices unless there is some relevant and qualitative difference between the two thought processes (which I don't think there is), so it's becoming hard for me to justify the difference from a pure theory perspective.
That being said, I'm not necessarily disagreeing. I'm just saying this is why the advice is so often so different for the two sections. I actually agree that on a theoretical level, it's all the same. I'm working hard to get there, but man, I've got a long way to go!
Watching your 18 minute LR section, @"Jonathan Wang" , actually really transformed my understanding of what speed means on this test. I kind of had a bit of an epiphany, and you mention it in the comments above. Speed doesn't come from tricks or gimmicks or even moving really fast. Speed comes from mastery of the concepts, and I think this is the true heart of this debate. If we reach the level of understanding we should be striving for, the whole debate is moot. If we're struggling for time to the point that skipping even easily eliminated answer choices is essential to our ability to complete the section, then this isn't really the issue anyway. The issue is a deficit in our understanding of the logical concepts upon which all of this operates. If we truly master the material, which is what we're all here to do, this question doesn't really even come up. There is plenty of time to eliminate all the wrong answers.
1. Use of the diagram for some Qs already generates the correct answer (MBT/F, if-then inference) or narrows down potential answers (e.g., CBT focuses on either-or elements). In other words, the net effect of POE was via diagram instead of reviewing answer choices. And either your diagram outputs the "correct" answer or it doesn't - viewing the other "wrong" choices won't change that output.
2. Other questions and previous work can matter. Some otherwise time-consuming questions can be answered (or significantly narrowed down) from reviewing other questions or previous work done. This aspect can result in a significant advantage or, if a key inference being tested/revealed is missed, time-consuming disadvantage. Some evil games are deliberately setup this way to reward efficient testing - and to punish plodding through.
3. Along that line, LG has arguably the severest potential time delta. Everything could flow smoothly; or that one twisted rule or missing inference could prolong an entire game and possibly subsequent ones. Every second spent (or banked early) truly counts, and consequences of rapid time trade-off judgements are open-ended (you won't find out until time's up) and packaged in four abstract clusters.
We should still determine the optimal methodology to answering LG questions that work for most everyone. The salient dangers to eliminate being mindless habits developed early that become fatal under test conditions. Any clarity here would be useful to most everyone.
Btw, great discussion!
For me, acknowledging that by employing pick-and-move you're cutting a corner should not be controversial, because you should be aware of the tradeoff you're making even if you go ahead and decide to make it anyway. I do think that framing the advice that way stops the conversation at the wrong place, sort of like how "part to whole" leaves out the whole "when the characteristic is not transitive in that manner" part. You can do a lot of damage by learning the buzzphrase and ignoring the context. Yes, you can skip it as a concession to your timing (key word: concession). But that doesn't mean that it's not problematic.
It is absolutely true that sometimes, your diagram will straight up show you the right answer and you don't need to be worried about seeing the wrong. But when your diagram ends up being that definitive, how hard is it really to disprove the others? I don't think I've ever seen a question where seeing the answer was super easy but disproving the others was super difficult. And what if it's not so clear cut? If the diagram isn't literally slapping you in the face, how can you be sure that you're not just missing something? How does it even occur to you that's something's wrong unless you glance through the others and realize "hey, wait a second, what about..."? Yeah, obviously the answer is 'do it right to begin with', but I don't think those things are mutually exclusive because you can do logic correctly and still just misinterpret or forget. You also can't ever complain about a 'stupid mistake' then because you've purposefully removed your safety net in the name of saving those few seconds. Again, calling it what it is should not be controversial. I've saved myself a lot of embarrassing tutoring moments over the years by having that "hey, wait a second" moment, something you completely deny yourself the opportunity to have if you just pick the first choice you like and move on.
It's also categorically untrue that there are games designed to force you to use prior information. Even just saying things like that shows the impact that incomplete advice can have on people. Questions are independent and have elegant, standalone solutions. From a test-taking perspective, using prior information can undoubtedly be a great time-saver; not questioning that. But from a theory perspective that's not how you should be tackling the question because that prior question won't always be there. By making the concession to your timing and marveling at how much more efficient you've become, you've denied yourself a valuable learning opportunity. This is not a problem if you go back and do it out from A to Z in your blind review...but how would you know to do that if you didn't think you had a problem with it in the first place? Again, back to the issue of short-term score maximization strategies versus getting actively better at the material, and how they have to be parallel processes at least.
https://youtu.be/F4vY0KpviJw
And the takeaways:
https://youtu.be/kwTN3_5SMNM
In this context, I feel it important to distinguish at least two different methodologies (training vs testing) and how to navigate their transition. The OP's question presents an opportunity to explain how BR is part of optimal training methodology to address fundamental issues (thereby gradually weaning off the need to check every single answer). And this in turn ultimately leads to optimal testing methodology in which checking more than one answer (e.g., POE beforehand; confirmation afterward to back-check diagram/rules setup; etc.) becomes a deliberately selective tool - part of Mastery is knowing when/what/why to check!
For the relative value of saving every second, I agree everyone in theory ought to have enough time to check every answer, but disagree that evryone in practice has sufficient time without opportunity costs. Certainly at one end of the spectrum a LSAT Jedi Master in tune with the Inference Force, with or sans diagrams, can consistently answer all questions correctly within 35min. But elsewhere along that spectrum where most of us LSAT padawans strive, seconds can add up, translating into a higher/lower score (e.g., sometimes previous work applies, sometimes it doesn't - but does the test methodology suggest when/what to check to rapidly find out?). We must understand, establish and relentlessly practice optimal methodologies as a baseline - from which deviations are deliberately tailored to individual situations.
Also want to reiterate my appreciation for your passionate perspective that (admittedly sometimes a bit over my head) often gleans valuable insights. And thanks everyone's shared input from this wonderful community.