LSAT personal tutors off CraigsList?
Posted: Mon Dec 08, 2008 3:23 pm
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bow chicka wah wahhhmallard wrote:I work as one and I'm really, really good.
Hahaha, this did make me laugh as well. I'm sure you're good, Mallardmallard wrote:I work as one and I'm really, really good.
mallard wrote:Oh, that too.
But I was serious.
Try doing a few untimed from older tests. Read the stimulus and then close your eyes. Do not read the answer choices. Think of the most instinctual and logical way you could attack the argument. Then open your eyes and see if any of the answer choices look like what you were thinking.tifania wrote:Cue the porn music!
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Mallard, I need some help with flaw questions. They are my weak spot. Are you in So. Cal by any chance?
Thanks for the advice! It sounds like it does address the reason i get flaw questions wrong -I get distracted by attractive answer choices which do not address the "biggest" or "most important" flaw.mallard wrote:Try doing a few untimed from older tests. Read the stimulus and then close your eyes. Do not read the answer choices. Think of the most instinctual and logical way you could attack the argument. Then open your eyes and see if any of the answer choices look like what you were thinking.tifania wrote:Cue the porn music!
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Mallard, I need some help with flaw questions. They are my weak spot. Are you in So. Cal by any chance?
I am not a real fan of pre-phrasing when it comes to the test itself, or even necessarily a real preptest, but as a study tool it can really work, and probably flaw questions are where it's the most powerful.tifania wrote:Thanks for the advice! It sounds like it does address the reason i get flaw questions wrong -I get distracted by attractive answer choices which do not address the "biggest" or "most important" flaw.mallard wrote:Try doing a few untimed from older tests. Read the stimulus and then close your eyes. Do not read the answer choices. Think of the most instinctual and logical way you could attack the argument. Then open your eyes and see if any of the answer choices look like what you were thinking.tifania wrote:Cue the porn music!
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Mallard, I need some help with flaw questions. They are my weak spot. Are you in So. Cal by any chance?
Pre-phasing an answer would help keep me on track...
Agreed. I almost never pre-phase as i find it's far too time-consuming, but i think you are right re: its application for flaw questions. I'll usually find 2 - sometimes even 3 answer choices that identify a flaw. Choosing the most important and most relevant flaw posed difficulties for me, because of how attractive the detractor answer choices would sound. Pre-phasing would definitely help in such instances.mallard wrote:I am not a real fan of pre-phrasing when it comes to the test itself, or even necessarily a real preptest, but as a study tool it can really work, and probably flaw questions are where it's the most powerful.tifania wrote:Thanks for the advice! It sounds like it does address the reason i get flaw questions wrong -I get distracted by attractive answer choices which do not address the "biggest" or "most important" flaw.mallard wrote:Try doing a few untimed from older tests. Read the stimulus and then close your eyes. Do not read the answer choices. Think of the most instinctual and logical way you could attack the argument. Then open your eyes and see if any of the answer choices look like what you were thinking.tifania wrote:Cue the porn music!
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Mallard, I need some help with flaw questions. They are my weak spot. Are you in So. Cal by any chance?
Pre-phasing an answer would help keep me on track...
Nobody's asked me this yet. I keep wanting them to.Mark715 wrote:Just a side-note. If you are getting a tutor off of Craig's List, I strongly suggest that you ask for proof of their score on the LSAT.
yeah i guess that does sound like a reasonable q to ask.mallard wrote:Nobody's asked me this yet. I keep wanting them to.Mark715 wrote:Just a side-note. If you are getting a tutor off of Craig's List, I strongly suggest that you ask for proof of their score on the LSAT.
Yes, definitely agree on this one as well.Mark715 wrote:Just a side-note. If you are getting a tutor off of Craig's List, I strongly suggest that you ask for proof of their score on the LSAT.
PS. I was just mass craiglisting to see the range of tutor fees and I emailed your tutor again without realizing, even though we already exchanged a few emails. Kind of embarrassing, one would say.tjb wrote:Yes, definitely agree on this one as well.Mark715 wrote:Just a side-note. If you are getting a tutor off of Craig's List, I strongly suggest that you ask for proof of their score on the LSAT.
I should tell you Zeke that I had contacted a few tutors off of CL in the NYC area--some of them were creepy flakes that wanted to meet me in scary places. I don't think you should pass on Laura--she helped me realize a lot of my errors & LR became a piece of cake (even though I might have only met her five times). She's young (graduated from UPenn in '05) & really down to earth. You'll feel comfortable studying with her. Hahaha, I'm not sure why I'm trying to sell her to you, but I feel really grateful that I studied with her leading up to the exam. She just simplifies everything!!zeke wrote:PS. I was just mass craiglisting to see the range of tutor fees and I emailed your tutor again without realizing, even though we already exchanged a few emails. Kind of embarrassing, one would say.tjb wrote:Yes, definitely agree on this one as well.Mark715 wrote:Just a side-note. If you are getting a tutor off of Craig's List, I strongly suggest that you ask for proof of their score on the LSAT.
What are her rates?tjb wrote:I should tell you Zeke that I had contacted a few tutors off of CL in the NYC area--some of them were creepy flakes that wanted to meet me in scary places. I don't think you should pass on Laura--she helped me realize a lot of my errors & LR became a piece of cake (even though I might have only met her five times). She's young (graduated from UPenn in '05) & really down to earth. You'll feel comfortable studying with her. Hahaha, I'm not sure why I'm trying to sell her to you, but I feel really grateful that I studied with her leading up to the exam. She just simplifies everything!!zeke wrote:PS. I was just mass craiglisting to see the range of tutor fees and I emailed your tutor again without realizing, even though we already exchanged a few emails. Kind of embarrassing, one would say.tjb wrote:Yes, definitely agree on this one as well.Mark715 wrote:Just a side-note. If you are getting a tutor off of Craig's List, I strongly suggest that you ask for proof of their score on the LSAT.