First diagnostic
Posted: Wed Apr 30, 2014 9:03 pm
When doing your first diagnostic, did you guess on the last questions in a section if you ran out of time or leave those unanswered to more accurately see what you know?
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As mentioned the score itself on a diag isn't what is important. Just guess, or leave them blank, doesn't really matter. The key is to go back and review those questions even if you got them right (via guessing).ocastro wrote:When doing your first diagnostic, did you guess on the last questions in a section if you ran out of time or leave those unanswered to more accurately see what you know?
Sorry, I guess I should have been more clear. When I say guessing here, I'm talking about the kind of guessing that is mentioned in the OP and is being talked about in this entire thread, blind guessing because you did not have time to get to the question at all.mornincounselor wrote:CincinnatusND wrote:I don't like guessing on anything in preptests. Guessing means pointlessly wasting prep material. Often some of the harder questions are at the end of the section, why waste them?
Your argument assumes that one will simply do the test and then grade themselves. It fails to take into account the possibility that the person can tag questions they are unsure about and blind review them. Guessing is not a sufficient determinate of wasting material.
You're still not "wasting" that material if you just go back and review it and in a real testing situation, you may have to guess on a few anyway.CincinnatusND wrote:Sorry, I guess I should have been more clear. When I say guessing here, I'm talking about the kind of guessing that is mentioned in the OP and is being talked about in this entire thread, blind guessing because you did not have time to get to the question at all.mornincounselor wrote:CincinnatusND wrote:I don't like guessing on anything in preptests. Guessing means pointlessly wasting prep material. Often some of the harder questions are at the end of the section, why waste them?
Your argument assumes that one will simply do the test and then grade themselves. It fails to take into account the possibility that the person can tag questions they are unsure about and blind review them. Guessing is not a sufficient determinate of wasting material.
I suppose you could guess even that way without wasting test material, if you graded blindly and didn't remember which selection you chose or had someone else grade it for you.
But that just seems like a complete waste of effort to me.
Also, how fucking obnoxious are law students/0L's? Am I right? Gee, I can't wait to meet a whole bunch of them!
I suppose. I still don't feel like I'm getting much at all out of reviewing a question I didn't think through on my own in the first place. Why not just mark where you got to in 35 minutes (if scoring your diagnostic really means that much to you) and then save the rest of the questions as un-touched material. Or just work them through after 35 minutes has passed.Ded Precedent wrote:
You're still not "wasting" that material if you just go back and review it and in a real testing situation, you may have to guess on a few anyway.
We clearly have a different understanding of what it means to run out of time, but this is so credited.mornincounselor wrote:On at least some Logic games one can improve their speed by selectively choosing which choices should be tested first. Guessing on questions tests these same muscles. Additionally, being able to eliminate 3 choices and guessing between the two remaining ones allows one a much better than 1/5 chance of choosing the correct choice.CincinnatusND wrote:I suppose. I still don't feel like I'm getting much at all out of reviewing a question I didn't think through on my own in the first place. Why not just mark where you got to in 35 minutes (if scoring your diagnostic really means that much to you) and then save the rest of the questions as un-touched material. Or just work them through after 35 minutes has passed.Ded Precedent wrote:
You're still not "wasting" that material if you just go back and review it and in a real testing situation, you may have to guess on a few anyway.
I really hope you wouldn't have to guess on anything blindly come test day. I wouldn't take the LSAT until I was confident I could finish every section. Either way, I don't see how it's relevant. Unless you feel like you really need the practice bubbling in answers you are completely guessing on.