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What are some helpful tips for reading carefully in the LR section while trying to finish all the questions in the allotted time. I understand you should master all question types to help speed up the process, but all that flies out the window once the timer starts
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Read for structure, not details. Don't get bogged down in the details. If you go back over a passage and highlight the exact sections, sentence(s) or phrase(s) in which an answer was to be found, I think you will see it is usually only a small portion of the passage. This might help alleviate that feeling that you need to grasp every single word. Also, if you are trying to "rush", you will retain little of it. Similarly, following the sentence lines with a pencil might help reduce backtracking or loosing your place in the passage.
Thanks. I'll try thst
are you talking about RC?
LSATkayy,
mastering Q types really is key getting faster at them. if it all goes out the window once the timer is on, that can improve. trust me, I've been there before, the timer always screwed me up and made me nervous and everything I knew just went to crap. With lots of time and practice, this feeling will go away, you just have to be patient and trust the process.
Some general tips though:
1. idk if the person above was talking about RC and misread your post, but I agree that you need to read for structure and identify what each part of an argument is, but in LR you definitely have to be attentive to small details because any little word can determine whether you get a question right or not.
always identify the conclusion and its supporting premises and the relationship between them!
for MSS questions, these can be a bit tricky as the right AC can be a conclusion that could go at the end of the stimulus, it can also literally be a paraphrase of a single line in the stimulus or it can just be small ideas within the stimulus that are put together to give an AC that is supported.
for LR master the question types so they're second nature, but also understand the stimulus. You lose time in the ACs, not the stimulus. Read it, understand it before you move on. If you have to re-read a sentence because you didn't understand it, do it.
Increased clarity on what the argument is saying will help you eliminate ACs/guide you to the correct AC very very quickly.
But also for timing, LR becomes very cookie cutter - so practice will strengthen the heck out of your prephasing skills.
Such great tips. You're all awesome thank you.