If you’re struggling on Logic Games, there’s a very good chance that you’re just not reading carefully enough.
The LSAT is the primary determinant of where he’ll go to school—and how much he’ll pay to go there. Don’t start your legal career with a shaky foundation.
You don’t suck at necessary assumption questions, but you may be struggling with Logical Reasoning more broadly. Remember: the game is to attack the argument. Your job is to disagree.
If you’re registered for an upcoming LSAT, you should plan to get the LSAT Writing portion out of the way as soon as possible. This is the least important part of the test, but you won’t be able to see your test score until you have an approved writing sample on file.
Some of you will take the LSAT in a couple of days. Some of you won’t. No one should suffer heart palpitations either way. If you’re not taking the official test this week, you should be doing your regularly scheduled drilling, timed practice sections, and occasional full timed practice tests.
The lightbulb won’t go on for these students until I can convince them to stop trying so hard on behalf of wrong answers. I need them to be active instead of passive. I need them to expect wrong answers to be wrong, then gleefully eliminate each one the instant it stops making sense.
No matter who says otherwise, remember: no one starts at perfect on the LSAT (and especially not at logic games).
It’s simple: online LSAT prep beats in-person classes. Read why we’re never going back.
Sure, great LSAT scores require speed. But the key to speed is accuracy. Focus on accuracy as you prepare for the test and you’ll be going faster in no time.
Applications open in early September at most law schools, and forward-looking students have started asking questions about their personal statements. “Where do I get started?” is by far the most common of these.