... most strongly supported questions. They will give you a huge conditional ... you just wasted 30 seconds trying to map this thing outfor ... conditional logic isn't always necessary to understand or ...
... conditions from the stimulus to figure out exactly what our ... most strongly supported questions, they will give you a huge ... you just wasted 30 seconds trying to map this thing outfor nothing ... conditional logic isn't always necessary to understand or ...
... 's, I read the stimulus of the game, the ... and then I am ready for the questions.
> > ... you know how long each game should take. So aim for ... not least, have you checked out any 7Sage lessons on ... much for your advice and help Alex. I always watch ...
... 's, I read the stimulus of the game, the ... and then I am ready for the questions.
> > ... you know how long each game should take. So aim for ... not least, have you checked out any 7Sage lessons on ... much for your advice and help Alex. I always watch ...
... 's, I read the stimulus of the game, the ... and then I am ready for the questions.
> > ... you know how long each game should take. So aim for ... not least, have you checked out any 7Sage lessons on ... much for your advice and help Alex. I always watch ...
... 's, I read the stimulus of the game, the ... and then I am ready for the questions.
> > ... you know how long each game should take. So aim for ... not least, have you checked out any 7Sage lessons on ... inherent order. Grouping games always felt like a mind ...
... for my late follow-up. A couple more questions: for drilling later one as well!
Yes, youshould ... (untimed) and write out explanations for them before reviewing JY ... 40 seconds a harder Parallel method of reasoning question ... to help as always :)
... have a long and convoluted stimulus wrong. How can I ensure ... time ( I am blind reviewing)? Should I postpone to December? out what is giving you a hard time about flaw and NA questions ... you can always use the negate test whereby you can negate an answer for ...
... have a long and convoluted stimulus wrong. How can I ensure ... time ( I am blind reviewing)? Should I postpone to December? out what is giving you a hard time about flaw and NA questions ... you can always use the negate test whereby you can negate an answer for ...
... have a long and convoluted stimulus wrong. How can I ensure ... time ( I am blind reviewing)? Should I postpone to December? out what is giving you a hard time about flaw and NA questions ... you can always use the negate test whereby you can negate an answer for ...
... I've read the stimulus and stem correctly, even ... mark for BR any questions with wrong ACs left that you ... do on later questions, I should be coming back ... time sucks (speaking of parallelquestions...). But maybe I'm ...
First, its ... on your own parallel argument puts you in the mindset ... the argument. So drawing parallel arguments could be immensely helpful ... get you away from always trying to read for logic and missing out ...
... can I say you two!! This thank youfor the thoughtful replies ... fundamentals down. There is always more learning to do, ... I should have really trusted my intuition, just like you ... questions, the answer could be literally 1 line picked out from the stimulus ...
... long as you maintain a grip on the stimulus. Some questions are half ... . One thing JY always says is there should at least be one ... />
For keeping track of three separate conditional statements without drawing them out ...
... as you maintain a grip on the stimulus. Some questions are ... One thing JY always says is there should at least be ... For keeping track of three separate conditional statements without drawing them out ... I really like what you do for "except" questions. I'm going ...
Parallel Flaw/Reasoning questions might be easier to understand if you recognized the pattern ... it and understand the stimulus/reasoning. For flaw questions, I ALWAYS paraphrase before going ... you just need to figure out the MAIN flaw. Sometimes a stimulus ...
... see if something jumps out quickly or you move on. The worse ... on. If you thought the stimulus was easy and you spot the right ... timer forquestions based on type, that's definitely something I should do ... the right one (I usually always get the wrong answer by ...
... choices when you clearly see that you can't figure out. I ... test, the less questions there will be for which you aren't sure ... who scored 180s. I've always read the stem first, ... also because stem should absolutely change how you read the stimulus. Some of ...
... types (untimed), I almost always go -0, and on ... question. For 1 to 2 difficulty level questionsyoushould have been ... keep re-reading the stimulus after each answer choice ... foryoufor each of the questionsyou skipped. Out of the questions pick two questions ...
... different for different questions. The answer to that question should determine on how youshould ... in addition draw your own parallel arguments to solidify that understanding ... flat out state what the flaw is -all on the same stimulus ...
... question, while not always difficult, are ... (flaw identification/Flaw questions, and logic), ... the stimulus more closely. For PR, ACs you can ... br />
- stimulus uses prescriptive language like "should"/"ought", while ... , but you'll figure out more strategies ...
... LR section. (It should be included in ... read effectively through the stimulus, and if possible, ... out, and annotated. As someone who's always ... C/key indicator words for logic) and felt ... you can answer questions untimed. Likely, you wont improve overall until you ...
... sounds to you. Youshould be able to write out a foolproof argument for why ... in the questionsyou get wrong. Are you reading for structure? Do youalways identify the ... conclusion and premise(s) when you first read a stimulus ...
... LR section. (It should be included in ... read effectively through the stimulus, and if possible, ... out, and annotated. As someone who's always ... C/key indicator words for logic) and felt ... you can answer questions untimed. Likely, you wont improve overall until you ...
... principle for SA and PSA questions to ... should go super-fast. Consider, “confidence drills” for ... Philosophical Paradox…” — Parsing out referential phrasing helps to ... as you progress through the stimulus. When ... support for that conclusion.
—Always ...
... a lot of questions asking youfor flat out inferences without providing ... So when you come across a question, always look back ... Mapout the remaining if you need to.
As for ... questions with your mind clouded with the unsurity of 'should ...
... obvious parallel / match the flaw type questions. The ... your answers for easy questions, saving you time in ... point, visualizing the stimulus and then breaking ... the argument, hunting out the conclusion first ... always necessary, but it will help you answer questions ...
... the rules. Usually for the harder questions, I would come ... the information in the stimulus would dish out a conclusion. Flaw/ ... conditional logic. I would always draw out the conditionals but I ... than half, then youshould be looking for similar words in the ...
... own experience hoping that you and some others could ... from the stimulus, and ALWAYS articulate the hidden assumption (for argument questions).
... believe more time should be spent on figuring out why the ... (which I'm sure you've already learned how to ...
... I'm going to run out of time.
< ... (1 point) youshould prioritize the questionsyou have the best ... realized that difficult questions were almost always far easier in ... d go through the stimulus and AC again but ... your natural reading cadence for RC and set ...