Posts Tagged ‘Logical Reasoning’
Macro-level strategies are a critical yet often neglected set of LSAT skills. When engaging with the test, you should always have a plan! How often should you skip, and how should you be deciding which questions to come back to later? What do you do when you don't understand a stimulus, or find yourself evenly torn between two attractive answers? Join instructor Rahela Sami for an exploration of the bigger-picture techniques that will keep you moving with purpose throughout a section.
Macro-level strategies are a critical yet often neglected set of LSAT skills. When engaging with the test, you should always have a plan! How often should you skip, and how should you be deciding which questions to come back to later? What do you do when you don't understand a stimulus, or find yourself evenly torn between two attractive answers? Join instructor Rahela Sami for an exploration of the bigger-picture techniques that will keep you moving with purpose throughout a section.
Macro-level strategies are a critical yet often neglected set of LSAT skills. When engaging with the test, you should always have a plan! How often should you skip, and how should you be deciding which questions to come back to later? What do you do when you don't understand a stimulus, or find yourself evenly torn between two attractive answers? Join instructor Rahela Sami for an exploration of the bigger-picture techniques that will keep you moving with purpose throughout a section.
Macro-level strategies are a critical yet often neglected set of LSAT skills. When engaging with the test, you should always have a plan! How often should you skip, and how should you be deciding which questions to come back to later? What do you do when you don't understand a stimulus, or find yourself evenly torn between two attractive answers? Join instructor Rahela Sami for an exploration of the bigger-picture techniques that will keep you moving with purpose throughout a section.
Macro-level strategies are a critical yet often neglected set of LSAT skills. When engaging with the test, you should always have a plan! How often should you skip, and how should you be deciding which questions to come back to later? What do you do when you don't understand a stimulus, or find yourself evenly torn between two attractive answers? Join instructor Rahela Sami for an exploration of the bigger-picture techniques that will keep you moving with purpose throughout a section.
Join 7Sage instructor Bailey Luber for a Blind Review session! This session will review Logical Reasoning questions from PrepTest 85; the material covered will be determined by student preference.
The Blind Review method involves going through the questions in a PT that you've recently completed before viewing your PT results. Reexamining your thought processes and reassessing your confidence in the answers that you chose while under time constraints provides valuable insight into your current level of LSAT accuracy.
Accordingly, it is highly recommended that you:
- Complete the PT section being reviewed this week beforehand, under timed conditions.
- Do not view your results for the section before the Blind Review session.
- Bring up your completed PT or section in Blind Review mode before class, so you have your previously chosen answers (and flagged questions) handy.
Join 7Sage instructor Bailey Luber for a Blind Review session! This session will review Logical Reasoning questions from PrepTest 84; the material covered will be determined by student preference.
The Blind Review method involves going through the questions in a PT that you've recently completed before viewing your PT results. Reexamining your thought processes and reassessing your confidence in the answers that you chose while under time constraints provides valuable insight into your current level of LSAT accuracy.
Accordingly, it is highly recommended that you:
- Complete the PT section being reviewed this week beforehand, under timed conditions.
- Do not view your results for the section before the Blind Review session.
- Bring up your completed PT or section in Blind Review mode before class, so you have your previously chosen answers (and flagged questions) handy.
Join 7Sage instructor Bailey Luber for a Blind Review session! This session will review Logical Reasoning questions from PrepTest 83; the material covered will be determined by student preference.
The Blind Review method involves going through the questions in a PT that you've recently completed before viewing your PT results. Reexamining your thought processes and reassessing your confidence in the answers that you chose while under time constraints provides valuable insight into your current level of LSAT accuracy.
Accordingly, it is highly recommended that you:
- Complete the PT section being reviewed this week beforehand, under timed conditions.
- Do not view your results for the section before the Blind Review session.
- Bring up your completed PT or section in Blind Review mode before class, so you have your previously chosen answers (and flagged questions) handy.
Join 7Sage instructor Bailey Luber for a Blind Review session! This session will review Logical Reasoning questions from PrepTest 82; the material covered will be determined by student preference.
The Blind Review method involves going through the questions in a PT that you've recently completed before viewing your PT results. Reexamining your thought processes and reassessing your confidence in the answers that you chose while under time constraints provides valuable insight into your current level of LSAT accuracy.
Accordingly, it is highly recommended that you:
- Complete the PT section being reviewed this week beforehand, under timed conditions.
- Do not view your results for the section before the Blind Review session.
- Bring up your completed PT or section in Blind Review mode before class, so you have your previously chosen answers (and flagged questions) handy.
Join 7Sage instructor Bailey Luber for a Blind Review session! This session will review Logical Reasoning questions from PrepTest; the material covered will be determined by student preference.
The Blind Review method involves going through the questions in a PT that you've recently completed before viewing your PT results. Reexamining your thought processes and reassessing your confidence in the answers that you chose while under time constraints provides valuable insight into your current level of LSAT accuracy.
Accordingly, it is highly recommended that you:
- Complete the PT section being reviewed this week beforehand, under timed conditions.
- Do not view your results for the section before the Blind Review session.
- Bring up your completed PT or section in Blind Review mode before class, so you have your previously chosen answers (and flagged questions) handy.