I'm taking off from working in order to store for the lsat. I am aiming to score a 165, the last time I took a practice test I scored 157. Logic games are my weakest sections and logical reasoning is my strongest section, im averaging 20+ right. On my last logic game test I got only nine correct. I have a learning disability known as "dysgraphia" that results in me making all sorts of typographical errors on the game unless I really really slow down and concentrate. I see myself making all sorts of careless mistakes and am going to have to work much harder than the average person to master logic games. I see myself doing silly stuff like writing a rule that something occurs on "Tuesday" and I misread it as it occurring on thursday, and my ability to use space properly on the games I find challenging. I write big and run out of room. Unfortunately, i doubt i would be accepted for any accomdations because throughout my academic career i've always been able to work through my dysgraphia and excel without much accomdations other than being able to use my labtop to take notes in class. In order to get through this, I planned on doing 30 logic games a day fool proofing previous games. Do you think this is a good method to improve?
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If you really want to go LG intensive (and that's a great idea) you want to focus on quality and understanding, not quantity. Quantity will never get you anywhere without quality. When I focused intensely on LG, I maxed out at three sections a day. And I was already consistently scoring in the -4 range with many -0s on fresh sections. Don't set out a number of games you're going to do on a given day. Set out the level to which you're going to master the ones you do that day and then do as many as you get to. (Set that level to 100%, btw.) After mastering a game, revisit it in about a week. If you're not -0 and under time, master it again. In a month, repeat the process. Do this to as many games as you can get to. If that's not every game ever published, that's fine. This process, regardless of how many games you get to, will be the most effective way to maximize your ultimate performance on Game Day.
I also have that issue with reading a word and somehow writing down something different, doing logic games makes me wonder if I'm dyslexic o.O. There also have been times where halfway thru the game I'll accidentally have added an extra player. like if it's P Q R S U Y, I might add in an X by accident on one question and for everything after I'll start playing the game as if there's this extra X game piece without any rules attached to it. Or when they describe the characters as Doctors in the stimulus I might accidentally add in a D. I think it's mostly just nerves distracting us.
It was very time consuming and, I could not even look at games for awhile, but now LG is my strongest section. You don't have to do 30 games per day, but I think repetition is a key for improving LG. Use the earlier PTs to solidify your basic understanding of how LG works. Doing it over and over and over again until i felt like..awww..this is how it works... really worked for me. I hope this is helpful.