- Mon Dec 28, 2020 4:59 pm
#82805
Hi Vasilia!
Being able to go back to look at specific key words can absolutely be useful and efficient. But, as you've noted, the LSAT can be a tricky beast and the correct answer is not always found exactly where the key term is found. In this case, the question stem mentioned 1989 but there's a lot more going on in this question stem besides just that date! Specifically, the question stem asks us to find "one of the reasons that massively parallel computers had not been used to model oil field flow prior to 1989." Instead of looking back at 1989, we want to look at any place in the passage that tells us why parallel computing wasn't used for oil flow earlier. This isn't really about the specific date. It's about the challenges/obstacles that prevented the technique from being used sooner. Always look more broadly at the big picture of what's being asked about or referenced rather than focusing on one specific term. You have to consider specific terms in the larger context of their individual paragraph and of the passage as a whole. Even when key terms are useful, you'll often find that key terms introduced in the first paragraph are also referred to in subsequent paragraphs, so you'll need to be prepared for that and stay flexible in your approach!
Hope this helps!
Best,
Kelsey