@DANIELHILLSHAFER said:
I broke the mid 160s hump by annotating the type of LR questions I was missing and then going over my old prep tests and working through those types. I wrote out a summary of the stimulus in my own words, then wrote out…
@zacharytsmith26 said:
Do you know the reason for the difference in your two LR section? That is a pretty big difference for it being the same section. If it is the first section LR that you struggle with then maybe you need to warm up LR pre-…
@TheDeterminedC said:
@zw2453 said:
I have 3 LR. The second one has a question about left half brain and right half and some comments on undiagnosed thing. That section has 25 question and the last one is a parallel question. The l…
@sc1293 said:
Had LR-RC-LR-LR-LG
Did anyone have an LR with parallel flaw for the last question? I'm hoping that it was my experimental.
Was that LR section with the last question being a parallel flaw the section with 26 questions?
Thanks for your response, @BinghamtonDave! The question I am looking at is 72-2-24, the library's collection on medieval manuscripts. There are about 7 lines of context followed by a 'however' and the author's argument. While the context includes a …
@ChaimtheGreat said:
I would try always identifying argument structure- make sure to locate the conclusion. Really understand what you are trying to strengthen, weaken... etc. Many times, trap answers don't really address the argument.
Those…
@"Simple Man" said:
I agree with @"Leah M B" . As they say, the enemy of my enemy is my friend. The best way to increase accuracy is to manage your time wisely. You may be getting through the section with no problem on time, but at what cost? …
@SomewhereBetween120and180 said:
One trick I learned from one of the webinars is to do coinfidence drills. Take an LR section and write it under timed conditions. For each question, after reading the stimulus, go through the answer choices wit…
@"Leah M B" said:
Well, this is a pretty wide open question. Do you think you are sacrificing accuracy in favor of speed? I'm wary of saying that speed isn't a problem but accuracy is. It's better to go slowly and carefully and work up on spee…
@Ohnoeshalpme said:
When you read through the question stem and the stimulus, try to predict what the answer is going to be before moving on to the questions. If you get in the habit of doing this, you'll move quickly through the questions and…