Looking at the last two released 67 and 68 tests, I can't help but feel that the LSAT is trending away from straight up diagrams and more towards correct rule notation and then the application of those rules.
Anyone else feel the same?
Is the new trend in LG away from clear diagrams? Forum
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- crestor
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Re: Is the new trend in LG away from clear diagrams?
that and many hypo specific questions which I dearly hope LSAC does this June
in b4 opposite
in b4 opposite
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Re: Is the new trend in LG away from clear diagrams?
By that you mean the conditional questions? e.g. "If F is in slot 2 then..."crestor wrote:that and many hypo specific questions which I dearly hope LSAC does this June
in b4 opposite
- crestor
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Re: Is the new trend in LG away from clear diagrams?
yeslinkx13 wrote:By that you mean the conditional questions? e.g. "If F is in slot 2 then..."crestor wrote:that and many hypo specific questions which I dearly hope LSAC does this June
in b4 opposite
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Re: Is the new trend in LG away from clear diagrams?
Here's the opposite:crestor wrote:that and many hypo specific questions which I dearly hope LSAC does this June
in b4 opposite
The LSAC has realized how much people are prepping for the LSAT and how "sophisticated" the methods that test prep companies have developed. So they're trying to break away from the common game types.
However, they haven't really figured out how to make a game that has you do something other than the basics: grouping or ordering. Sure, there are some rare games that crop up every once in a while (mapping or grid games), but they're the exception.
So what they've been doing instead is taking those basic game types and putting a single wrinkle into them. If you take that wrinkle away, they're just a common game type. Then, after you get the game set up, if you put that wrinkle back in, it turns out to either be a pretty easy-to-represent, normal rule, or it creates a huge constraint on the game which can allow you to do scenarios.
So I don't think games have moved away from having strong setups/deductions; I just think that people have started to see them that way because they're letting the LSAT mess with their heads. Don't let the LSAT win!
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Re: Is the new trend in LG away from clear diagrams?
And while this is true for 67 and 68, don't let two tests determine a "trend" in your mind! (I made this mistake). Just keep doing what you've been doing.
LG questions require flexibility - some you can answer from the set-up, some you can reuse your answers, some you just gotta brute-force hypo.
LG questions require flexibility - some you can answer from the set-up, some you can reuse your answers, some you just gotta brute-force hypo.
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