1:00 am
2 hrs
All levels
Recording
Premium or Live plan required.
Need more time? Do these questions in advance. Time will not be given during class to work on them.
Logical Reasoning
Test 155, Section 1, Q5 — Ornithomimids
Test 155, Section 1, Q14 — Government spending
Test 155, Section 1, Q15 — Outside cats
Reading Comprehension
Test 77, Passage 1 — Humanities
Logical Reasoning
Test 156, Section 2, Q16 — Rat study
Test 155, Section 1, Q22 — Moral virtue
Test 156, Section 4, Q25 — Dr. Abner
Test 16, Section 3, Q25 — Labor tax
Highlights
This class started with fairly straightforward Logical Reasoning questions which ramped up to more challenging questions. However, no matter the difficulty level, Nathan tells us that when you’re studying, your intention should be to never get a question wrong. The class learned that the key to Reading Comprehension is to get interested in what the author is saying, no matter the topic. Thinking along with the author is how you comprehend what you read. When we say all the Reading Comprehension questions are Must be True questions, we mean that the answers come straight from what the passage says. Even when a question asks us to infer, the correct answer still must be true based on what the passage says. The class faced some difficulty with a Must be True question and also got some advice about whether or not you should refer back to a Reading Comprehension passage.
I’m not yelling at you—I’m yelling at the LSAT. My goal is to show you how easy this test can be.
Join cofounder Nathan Fox for an all-levels class appropriate for your first day of LSAT prep, your last day of LSAT prep, or anywhere in between. Show up, try your best, and ask questions.