1 Month to improve RC? Forum
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1 Month to improve RC?
Hi, I was wondering if its possible to improve RC in one month. I'm taking the June lsat and was aiming for -4 on this section. However, right now I'm getting -8 to -10. Any advice? This tends to be for the late 50's PT
- Micdiddy
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Re: 1 Month to improve RC?
It's possible to improve RC in one week. Find an approach that works for you and learn it front to back. I think recognizing that most RC questions are really just "must be trues" helped me with that section a lot.ElectricSheep wrote:Hi, I was wondering if its possible to improve RC in one month. I'm taking the June lsat and was aiming for -4 on this section. However, right now I'm getting -8 to -10. Any advice? This tends to be for the late 50's PT
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Re: 1 Month to improve RC?
In addition, I would pay attention the ways in which trap answers consistently give themselves away. Eliminating tempting traps will buy you a lot of time if you need to re-check the passage later.
Often times the most perfectly-worded, attractive answer will contain some distortion like using "All" instead of "some" or veer in a slightly incorrect fashion at the very last moment. You should quickly recognize its time to let that answer go and move on to scrutinizing the other answers. I often circled or underlined parts of an answer that were damning so I quickly knew what was up on a second pass. Be on the lookout for when it seems too good to be true, it likely is.
Also are you timestamping everything? Its easy to lose track going passage after passage but oftentimes it was a single 5-minute question that would derail entire section sections for me. Time-sink mitigation was huge for me, I wish I had focused on it earlier.
Often times the most perfectly-worded, attractive answer will contain some distortion like using "All" instead of "some" or veer in a slightly incorrect fashion at the very last moment. You should quickly recognize its time to let that answer go and move on to scrutinizing the other answers. I often circled or underlined parts of an answer that were damning so I quickly knew what was up on a second pass. Be on the lookout for when it seems too good to be true, it likely is.
Also are you timestamping everything? Its easy to lose track going passage after passage but oftentimes it was a single 5-minute question that would derail entire section sections for me. Time-sink mitigation was huge for me, I wish I had focused on it earlier.
- jcccc
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Re: 1 Month to improve RC?
Honestly, I think you could. I would drill something like 8 passages, under the time constraints, a day and then vigorously and thoroughly review them after. Understand why every incorrect answer is incorrect, why you mistakenly thought it was correct at the time you were answering it, and why the credited answer is correct.
Good luck
Good luck
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Re: 1 Month to improve RC?
Viewing the questions as (soft) Must be Trues is a great way to improve your score quickly. Treat them as LR questions.Micdiddy wrote:It's possible to improve RC in one week. Find an approach that works for you and learn it front to back. I think recognizing that most RC questions are really just "must be trues" helped me with that section a lot.ElectricSheep wrote:Hi, I was wondering if its possible to improve RC in one month. I'm taking the June lsat and was aiming for -4 on this section. However, right now I'm getting -8 to -10. Any advice? This tends to be for the late 50's PT
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Re: 1 Month to improve RC?
I'm not sure what you mean by (soft) MBT. Can you elaborate more on this.bp shinners wrote:
Viewing the questions as (soft) Must be Trues is a great way to improve your score quickly. Treat them as LR questions.
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Re: 1 Month to improve RC?
Must Be True questions are the ones that read: "Which one of the following can be logically inferred from the information above?" These are 100% certain based on info above, and they tend to be diagrammable. Thus, they tend to be relegated to Logical Reasoning.ElectricSheep wrote:I'm not sure what you mean by (soft) MBT. Can you elaborate more on this.bp shinners wrote:
Viewing the questions as (soft) Must be Trues is a great way to improve your score quickly. Treat them as LR questions.
Soft Must Be True questions are the ones that read: "Which one of the following is most strongly supported/best illustrated by the information above?" There's a little wiggle room in these, so you're generally looking for weaker answer choices that have info that directly support it. They're not 100%, but they're close to it. RC questions are mostly of this variety, and you should approach them as such.
Other than ~MBT questions and the traditional RC question types (Main Point, Primary Purpose, Specific Reference, etc...), you should be on the lookout for Parallel questions and Strengthen/Weaken questions, as these LR question types show up very often in RC. You should approach them the same way.