Posts Tagged ‘Difficulty: Moderate’

Struggling to understand the notion of support and the critical role it plays Logical Reasoning? This class features an in-depth exploration and analysis of question types within the strengthening subset including NA, Strengthen, PSAr, and SA questions. Learn to navigate the nuanced differences that make each of these question types unique, yet similar!
Pace: 4-8 Questions
Difficulty: 3-5 Stars

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Sufficient and necessary conditions are some of the most common logical elements encountered in logical reasoning. Easily confused with each other and often unintuitive, they can make for some truly hard SA and NA questions! This class will cover the concepts and strategies that are essential for effectively navigating both question types.
Difficulty: 3-5 stars
Pace: 4-7 Questions


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Split into PSAr (find the rule) and PSAa (application) questions, these cousins of Sufficient Assumption questions tend to be less straightforward- and thus more difficult! This class will cover the concepts and strategies that are essential for effectively navigating both variants of this question type.
Difficulty: 3-5 stars
Pace: 4-8 Questions


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Struggling to hold yourself accountable and avoid distractions? We’ve got the class for you! No chit-chat, no distractions, just pure focused study time with expert explanations to guide you. Join us for an hour of uninterrupted practice. You’ll get 3 minutes per question to do your own work followed up by a brief description from our instructor. Stay on track and hone your skills with accountability and expert insights. Note: Chat will only be used to discuss the questions
Question Difficulty: 1-5 stars
Pace: Fast, 6-8 questions


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Struggling to hold yourself accountable and avoid distractions? We’ve got the class for you! No chit-chat, no distractions, just pure focused study time with expert explanations to guide you. Join us for an hour of uninterrupted practice. You’ll get 3 minutes per question to do your own work followed up by a brief description from our instructor. Stay on track and hone your skills with accountability and expert insights. Note: Chat will only be used to discuss the questions
Question Difficulty: 1-5 stars
Pace: Fast, 6-8 questions


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One of the common styles of RC passages presents a critique of a viewpoint or idea, or evaluates competing viewpoints. Recognizing the common patterns that occur in critique or debate passages can improve your speed and comprehension whenever you encounter them. This class will cover tips and strategies that will help you recognize and navigate this passage style with ease!
Difficulty: 1-5 Stars
Pace: 1-2 Passages


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Do you find yourself running out of time when completing an LR section? Even getting a question correct can be costly if it takes extra time that should've gone to other questions. This class moves at a faster pace, with an emphasis on strong timing habits and strategies. Each class will focus on a different question type, offering specific strategies to improve speed.
Difficulty: 2-4 Stars
Pace: Fast! 10-12 Questions


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Do you find yourself running out of time when completing an LR section? Even getting a question correct can be costly if it takes extra time that should've gone to other questions. This class moves at a faster pace, with an emphasis on strong timing habits and strategies. Each class will focus on a different question type, offering specific strategies to improve speed.
Difficulty: 2-4 Stars
Pace: Fast! 10-12 Questions


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When you get a question wrong you haven't just missed the correct answer, but have actively chosen a wrong answer. What makes a trap answer so alluring? Often a bad answer would be correct if allowed an assumption that's just a step too far. Learn to effectively scrutinize attractive answer choices, and stop feeding trap answers the assumptions they crave! The class does one question together as a warm up. After that, students will get 2-3 minutes to attempt each question on their own before reviewing with the instructor.
Difficulty: 2-5 Star
Pace: 4-6 Questions

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When you get a question wrong you haven't just missed the correct answer, but have actively chosen a wrong answer. What makes a trap answer so alluring? Often a bad answer would be correct if allowed an assumption that's just a step too far. Learn to effectively scrutinize attractive answer choices, and stop feeding trap answers the assumptions they crave! The class does one question together as a warm up. After that, students will get 2-3 minutes to attempt each question on their own before reviewing with the instructor.
Difficulty: 2-5 Star
Pace: 4-6 Questions

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