Important tip for LSAT assumption questions
December 31, 2008 at 7:23 am | In Uncategorized | Leave a CommentOne of the most frequently used kinds of questions in the arguments sections of the LSAT is the assumptions questions, in which you are supposed to figure out, which assumption out of the four or five possible answers the argument depends on. The most common reason for the wrong choice of answer out of the two competing, seemingly valid answers is the following: one of the answers that seems to be correct is not the right answer because, while it might be the general assumption that’s necessary for the argument to be valid, it’s not an assumption which is necessary to support that particular argument.
For example, consider the following argument:
“David decided to go to Starbucks instead of Peet’s Coffee because he wants to lose weight. “
The correct answer to the assumption question would probably look like this:
Starbucks serves a lower-calorie food/drinks that Peet’s.
The writers of the LSAT will try to mask the correct answer with another option that will generally look like an assumption that’s also needed, such as: the assumption that there are both Starbucks and Peet’s are located in your area; or that you have the money to pay for what they sell, etc…
When you are faced with those competing answers, remember this very important fact: you are not asked to just find a valid assumption in the argument, as there are many of those, including such facts as that you are able to walk, that you are not allergic to coffee, that you can speak the language and explain what you need to the coffee barista, etc… You are asked to identify the assumption on which that specific argument depends. All the other assumptions are generally necessary for just about every argument, but they are not needed to link the permise and the conclusion of the specific argument that you are dealing with. To link loss of weight with the choice of coffee store you are going to go to in the above example, you only need one assumption: the assumption that one store’s products are less fattening than the other’s. The rest of the possible assumptions, while theoretically necessary, are not necessary to connect the two parts of that specific argument.
Keep this tip in mind, and it will be of great help to you when you are dealing with the so common assumption questions in the arguments section of the LSAT.
San Francisco LSAT: Group classes v. Individual LSAT tutoring sessions
December 7, 2008 at 9:40 pm | In Getting High LSAT Score, How to study for LSAT, Private LSAT tutuoring | Leave a CommentTags: lsat high score, San Francisco LSAT instruction classes
One of the typical mistakes that LSAT students make when preparing for the exam is that they place too much value and rely too heavily on the prep course. They believe that once they learn all the “tricks” and all the techniques for solving games and arguments, they will be ready to go and get a high score on the LSAT exam. This is hardly ever true, however, as there is much more to succeeding on LSAT exam than just knowing the tricks; it’s is mostly about knowing how and when to apply the useful LSAT strategies, and this only comes with experience.
Like any other skills, becoming good and quick with lsat logical games and analytical reasoning arguments takes time and parctice. You must develop that intuition of what was on the mind of the author of any given question and what he is trying to test you on in order to answer any given question quickly and correctly. This comes only with the quantity of work done and with trying to solve a variety of problem as well as going over the questions you haven’t answered correctly and trying to understanding what pevent you from solving any given question or problem.
Thus, if you have a few months before taking the test, you must be planning to do at least one LSAT section per day every day in order to develop that necessary experience for a high LSAT score.
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