7:00 pm
1 hr
Foundational
Recording
Premium or Live plan required.
Logical Reasoning
Test 155, Section 2, Q17 — Stress
Test 155, Section 4, Q15 — Candidate
Test 156, Section 2, Q25 — Newtonian theory
Highlights
Ideally, prediction is NOT an independent step that comes after reading the question. Rather, it’s a continuation of our proactive engagement with the passage. After reading the first sentence of two separate passages in today’s class, we paused, thinking: “That’s a correlation. I suspect the author may confuse it with causation.” Sure enough, in both cases, the argument went on to confuse correlation with causation—one of the most common flaws on the LSAT. Predicting the answers to each of those Flaw questions was easy work because of the way we actively read through the passages.
Billy believes the key to conquering the LSAT is learning how to actively engage with every passage. Don’t just sit back and let the test mislead or confuse you—ask critical questions! Scrutinize assumptions! Demand better reasoning! Billy helps students build the skills to have a productive dialogue with the LSAT.
LSAT Journey: 164 → 177
The secrets of the LSAT lie in the passage—we’ll use our crystal ball reading skills to make useful predictions about what is to come. This clairvoyance-focused LR class teaches how to stay one step ahead by moving slowly, and surely, through arguments.