- Fri Jun 23, 2017 5:40 pm
#36285
Hey there, akanshachandra, I feel your pain! Diagramming is usually time-consuming, and as the clock ticks louder and louder and the urge to rush mounts it can seem like a terrible dilemma to think you might have to start drawing out conditional diagrams in order to answer one more question.
A few points about that generally before I get to the specific question here. First, while diagramming can indeed be a bit slow at times, it is often the case that the payoff, in the form of easily, confidently, and quickly selecting the right answer because the diagram makes it all but impossible to miss, is worth it. While I don't diagram often, when I see a complex conditional argument in the stimulus I am more than happy to take a moment to draw it out. Once I have done so, finding the right answer is like doing a child's connect-the-dots puzzle. It's worth it!
That said, if I am getting close to the end of a section and I am concerned about running out of time, I may choose not to diagram a question, but to either look for a shortcut or else skip that question and come back to it later if time allows.
Don't let that "under two minutes per question" thing rule your world. In order to answer every question you need to average about 1.5 minutes per question, but that is just an average. Some questions you will knock out in under a minute, others may take closer to 3. The goal is not to hurry up and answer more questions, but to get more right answers. If taking a few extra seconds to draw a quick diagram will guarantee a right answer, why not take that time to do it right? Don't sink 5 minutes into a diagram, but don't be afraid to invest a little extra time, compared to an easier question, on getting another right answer on your score sheet. If I have a choice between answering 25 questions and getting 15 of them right, or answering 18 questions and getting them all right, I will choose the latter every. single. time. Invest, and reap your dividends!
Finally, I reserve my diagramming for questions that contain clear conditional reasoning, that have more than two conditions involved (because I can handle just two conditions in my head, and so can you with practice), and for which diagrams seem like a useful tool based on the question stem. A Must Be True question with conditional reasoning is a good candidate, as is a Justify the Conclusion question or a Cannot Be True question. So would a Parallel Reasoning or certain Assumption questions.
In this case, with a Strengthen question stem, and with the conditional reasoning being somewhat subtle ("Journalists who..." is a variation on "people who...", so we could certainly create a diagram if we wanted), I don't see much value in diagramming. Instead, I will use my standard Strengthen strategy - identify the conclusion and make it more likely to be true.
Here, the first sentence is the conclusion - the journalists who conceal are staking their reps on anecdotes. That concept of "reputation" is a new element in the conclusion, not mentioned elsewhere in the argument, so I know my correct answer has to talk about how those anecdotes are tied to reputation. The premises talk about the elements of anecdotes - plausible, original, and interesting. So I want to link those concepts to reputation, like this:
Reputation depends on/is affected by plausibility, originality, and interest level of a claim.
With that prephrase in mind, and with no diagram at all, I head into my answers and start sorting losers and contenders.
A looks good - it talks about what I need to talk about
B is a loser - no connection to reputation
C looks odd - it talks about rep indirectly, and mentions two of my three criteria, but one criterion is positive and the other negative. I don't like it, but I might keep it for now
D is a loser - no mention of the criteria of plausibility, originality, and interest level
E is a loser - no mention of any of my crucially needed elements (only something that might be somewhat connected to reputation)
I have it down to A and C, and A looks right on the money to me. I pick it and move on. Winner!
Diagram when it is clearly called for, and you'll get better at recognizing when that is and is not the case with more practice and familiarity with the material. When it isn't called for, don't force it, but try a different approach instead.
I hope that helped. Good luck, keep pounding!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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