I've said this to Mark a couple times already, but Jason, read this lesson/blog post on "why you must practice skipping questions on timed LSATs". I explain in there why people freak out during the real test.
... star at next to the lesson on the progress page. If ... you completed the lesson, there should be a green ... similar problems before when the lesson is not shown as complete ... . Clicking the "next lesson" would usually solve the problem ...
... covered in http://7sage.com/lesson/advanced-andor-in-sufficient-conditions ... / and
http://7sage.com/lesson/advanced-andor-in-necessary-conditions/
Thanks, I didn't get this question right on the first run through, I had to look up the word anomaly to get this question right. You been quite active lately. Every lesson I go I see your insightful comments. You planning to take the October LSAT?
Oh wow, that's a really good way to this about this game! I'll have to redo the video (again). Did you post this on the lesson page? Please do if you haven't. I think people should try this method. Certainly waaaaay better than what I did.
Every night I dream about solving lsat problems. Most of the time it involves struggling with an rc passage.... It's become a miserable recurring experience. Hahah 100% truth .
I'm getting that too with Chrome. I'm assuming it's transient, so not stressing too much. My work-around is to navigate away from the lesson page, then return. When I restart, I fast-forward to where I was. But, yes, annoying.