11:30 pm
1.5 hrs
All levels
Recording
Premium or Live plan required.
Logical Reasoning
Test 6, Section 2, Q4 — Explanations
Test 7, Section 1, Q10 — Hyperactive children
Test 130, Section 1, Q18 — Travel agent
Extra practice
Test 131, Section 1, Q5 — Hemlocks of Leyland
Test 130, Section 4, Q14 — Crime increasing
Highlights
Go into every argument and answer choice you read expecting it to be wrong and probably dumb. Why? Most arguments on the LSAT are flawed, usually in a dumb way, like taking people’s opinions about crime to reflect actual crime statistics or taking the number of reports filed by an airline as an indication of that airline’s safety without considering what those reports actually say. Similarly, LR answer choices are usually dumb. There can only be one correct answer, so 80% of the answers are wrong. Use that knowledge to your advantage, and get better at the LSAT by viciously debating the author and eliminating answer choices the moment you sniff something fishy. Don’t let the LSAT make you an April fool. Learn more here.
Ryan's diagnostic was a 150, but he always knew that he could push himself higher if he learned the test the right way. Ryan enjoys teaching logical reasoning and seeing students' confidence grow as they start predicting the right answer over, and over, and over again.
LSAT Journey: 150 → 174
A good lawyer is prepared to argue on either side of a debate. This all-levels class teaches you to find flaws and know what to do with them reliably. The LSAT can ask you to switch sides at any moment. Get ready to complete or kill any argument in this class.