12:30 am
1 hr
Intermediate
Recording
Premium or Live plan required.
Logical Reasoning
Test 32, Section 1, Q11 — Foreign policies
Test 32, Section 1, Q7 — Keyboarding
Bonus
Test 56, Section 3, Q2 — Shareholder
Highlights
The sufficient necessary flaw doesn’t need to feel like a brain teaser! Tune in as Ryan advocates for an intuitive approach to identifying the flaw. The class also discusses the important distinction between “must be true” and “most strongly supported” questions.
The LSAT clicked for Ryan when he stopped reading between the lines and started just reading the lines. From picking apart faulty LR arguments to simplifying knotty RC passages, he encourages students to treat the LSAT with a little bit less respect. He helps students get out of their own way by focusing on just the words on the page—nothing more, nothing less.
Get ready to channel your pent-up rage into annihilating weak arguments and punching back at wrong answer choices. The more aggressively we attack arguments, the better -- it’s time to get our frustration to work for us on the LSAT.