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.
The key to scoring higher on Reading Comprehension is realizing that all the questions are essentially Must Be True questions.
Read on to debunk the theory that you’re better off reading the question stem first on LSAT Logical Reasoning questions.
It's simple: the LSAT tests English, logic, and how hard you can work. Read more from LSAT Demon cofounder Nathan Fox.
Check out these seven foundational LSAT lessons for new and veteran LSAT students alike.
Master LSAT Flaw questions: predict argument weaknesses, avoid traps, and learn top logical flaws to boost your score.
Learn to crack LSAT Necessary Assumption questions: identify premises, spot gaps, predict missing links, and pick the must-be-true answer.
Learn how to conquer the “Role” question type on LSAT Logical Reasoning.
Learn how to conquer the “Reasoning” question type on LSAT Logical Reasoning.
Learn how to conquer the “Parallel Reasoning” and “Parallel Flaw” question types on LSAT Logical Reasoning.