- PowerScore Staff
- Posts: 5972
- Joined: Mar 25, 2011
- Mon Jan 25, 2021 7:59 pm
#83543
Hi Jasmin,
Thanks for the question! First, let me reassure you that the answers are indeed correct Second, this is a tough and slightly weird game, so it's good to look at games like this prior to taking your LSAT.
You commented that, "It looks like each dancer is only allowed to be in each recital once, but the instructions didn't say this." What the test makers will tell you is that the way the game is described makes each dance is unique to each child. While it does not explicitly say a child can't repeat, their idea would be that once someone Karl dances in the first dance, that was his dance 1; he can't then dance another "dance 1" with a different partner. So, if Karl dances with two partners in "dance 1," they'd say that makes no sense and reject it. Thus, they didn't feel the need to make it explicit. It may even be they didn't want to make it clearer than that, because this was designed to be a very tough game overall.
So, I follow the point you are making, but obviously my job is to explain their thinking on things like these and they'd see it as 1-to-1 with the dances!
Thanks for the question! First, let me reassure you that the answers are indeed correct Second, this is a tough and slightly weird game, so it's good to look at games like this prior to taking your LSAT.
You commented that, "It looks like each dancer is only allowed to be in each recital once, but the instructions didn't say this." What the test makers will tell you is that the way the game is described makes each dance is unique to each child. While it does not explicitly say a child can't repeat, their idea would be that once someone Karl dances in the first dance, that was his dance 1; he can't then dance another "dance 1" with a different partner. So, if Karl dances with two partners in "dance 1," they'd say that makes no sense and reject it. Thus, they didn't feel the need to make it explicit. It may even be they didn't want to make it clearer than that, because this was designed to be a very tough game overall.
So, I follow the point you are making, but obviously my job is to explain their thinking on things like these and they'd see it as 1-to-1 with the dances!
Dave Killoran
PowerScore Test Preparation
Follow me on X/Twitter at http://twitter.com/DaveKilloran
My LSAT Articles: http://blog.powerscore.com/lsat/author/dave-killoran
PowerScore Podcast: http://www.powerscore.com/lsat/podcast/
PowerScore Test Preparation
Follow me on X/Twitter at http://twitter.com/DaveKilloran
My LSAT Articles: http://blog.powerscore.com/lsat/author/dave-killoran
PowerScore Podcast: http://www.powerscore.com/lsat/podcast/