- PowerScore Staff
- Posts: 5978
- Joined: Mar 25, 2011
- Sat Aug 22, 2015 4:28 pm
#19471
Hi Rochelle,
Ok, I have looked over what you sent me and have a few tips that should help you improve. Before making any comments, however, I want to take a moment to thank you for providing such excellent commentary on each problem. It really helps us when we can get details on why you had trouble with each question. So, thank you for that!
The first thing I noticed about the set of question that you provided was that these are all pretty much advanced conditional problems. They almost always feature chains of terms, and multiple sufficient or necessary components in the conditions. That means that when you see a problem that has three or more conditions in play, you need to really focus. It's not that the problems have conditional relationships that are more challenging than average, instead it's that there are just more of them, and mentally juggling more terms is naturally more challenging.
I have additional recommendations below, but knowing that compound conditionality is an area of difficulty for you gives you the chance to spend more time looking over those types of problems now. Whenever you see one on a test or in practice, make a note of it and then come back later and really break it down in detail until you are 100% comfortable with it. I want you to know it so well that if I called you up out of the blue and said, "Rochelle, explain this to me," that you would not even hesitate and you'd nail the explanation
Second, I'm glad I asked you to look at the language in these questions. You ran in to some problems with seeing conditional indicators, and one of the things is that absolute language—in almost any form—can convey a conditional relationship. So, one thing you need to consistently be able to do is recognize when conditionality is present. There were several problems where you said you didn't see indicators, so working on this area is extremely important, and it will help you improve (because if you don't realize it's there, it's impossible to work with the concept). Let's look at some examples"
Ok, my goal here isn't to explain each problem, but to draw out the larger elements so we can see why you are having problems with some of these. You're nailing whether an argument is present, you're properly identifying the conclusions when they are present, you are seeing the general type of language in use, and often your diagrams are correct. So, those aren't the root problems, and, being able to do all of that is a great sign for continued improvement! The problems are that sometimes you aren't seeing the language they use as conditional, and sometimes you are just getting caught up in the complex web of connections they weave. Those two factors are actually what cause these problems to be hard in the first place, and so really you are having issues exactly where you'd expect there to be problems. Don't let that discourage you! Instead, buckle down on these problems and when you are studying, break them into component pieces until you understand every single step. Then, look at what was and was not important in determining the correct answer. That will help sharpen your LSAT radar and make you a better test taker. But again, overall this is good news
Third, I want to make a general comment about diagramming. You said, "I don't know how to diagram this stimulus." Always remember that diagramming is a tool, not a necessity. You only need to diagram when you think it will help you. But, the nice thing about diagramming a lot while you are practicing is that it helps prove that you know what was said. I always tell students to diagram a lot at first just so you master it, and then as time passes you should diagram less and less because what eventually occurs is that when you encounter a conditional relationship the "picture" of the relationships will instantly springs to mind.
Ok, hopefully the comments above give you some things to think about as well as apply while you are studying. Thanks and have a great weekend!
Ok, I have looked over what you sent me and have a few tips that should help you improve. Before making any comments, however, I want to take a moment to thank you for providing such excellent commentary on each problem. It really helps us when we can get details on why you had trouble with each question. So, thank you for that!
The first thing I noticed about the set of question that you provided was that these are all pretty much advanced conditional problems. They almost always feature chains of terms, and multiple sufficient or necessary components in the conditions. That means that when you see a problem that has three or more conditions in play, you need to really focus. It's not that the problems have conditional relationships that are more challenging than average, instead it's that there are just more of them, and mentally juggling more terms is naturally more challenging.
I have additional recommendations below, but knowing that compound conditionality is an area of difficulty for you gives you the chance to spend more time looking over those types of problems now. Whenever you see one on a test or in practice, make a note of it and then come back later and really break it down in detail until you are 100% comfortable with it. I want you to know it so well that if I called you up out of the blue and said, "Rochelle, explain this to me," that you would not even hesitate and you'd nail the explanation
Second, I'm glad I asked you to look at the language in these questions. You ran in to some problems with seeing conditional indicators, and one of the things is that absolute language—in almost any form—can convey a conditional relationship. So, one thing you need to consistently be able to do is recognize when conditionality is present. There were several problems where you said you didn't see indicators, so working on this area is extremely important, and it will help you improve (because if you don't realize it's there, it's impossible to work with the concept). Let's look at some examples"
- #31. You said, "I can't find the necessary indicators and I saw no sufficient indicators." But, you also knew there were absolutes here, so you are probably closer than you think to catching on to how this is working. The first indicator is a tough one, and it is the word "imperative." "Imperative" means necessary or required, so that first sentence is: "democracy survive average citizen develop etc."
There's another indicator here as well, but it doesn't play a huge role in this problem. It will do so in other problems, though, so I want to address it now. That indicator is "must." If something must be done, then it is required which is the same idea as necessary. Based on some comments you made in other problems, I'm thinking that the word "must" hadn't really translated to you as a necessary indicator, and just seeing how that works will make you better immediately
The thing to note with "must" is how it's used. If I say "I must eat a donut," technically that's a conditional statement (if it's me eat donut). But, that diagram is not really what I'm getting at with that statement, and so turning it into a diagram is unhelpful. On the other hand, a statement such as "For government to increase investment by citizens, the tax rate on capital gains must be decreased," is one where the conditional relationship is far more useful to understand. If we were to diagram that statement (but we don't have to, as I discuss below), it would be: Govt increase inv decrease cap gains tax rate.
#46. In this problem, you mentioned: "ABSOLUTES; Wasn't able to build a diagram. Can't figure out the SN indicators." Before reading any further, what I want you to do with this problem is re-read it again, don't think about diagramming, and see if you can tell what they are doing here.
There's two things causing problems in this one: they've created chains of statements, but they've split the conditions into different sentences, and they've conveyed the conditionality with some unusual phrasings. Look at the following section, with some of the conditional indicators italicized:
"If the press were not profit‑making, who would support it? The only alternative is subsidy and, with it, outside control. It is easy to get subsidies for propaganda, but no one will subsidize honest journalism."
So, that first sentence says that if you're not profit making, you need some support. The sentence as given doesn't tell you what that support is (it leaves it as a question: "Who would support it?"). The next sentence supplies what the support is (subsidies) and it's the only option, meaning that we have a relationship where if the press doesn't make a profit, then it must be subsidized (profit subsidies). Further, as the final sentence indicates, if there are subsidies, then it's not honest journalism (subsidies honest journalism). Those two diagrams can be connected into a longer chain:
profit subsidies honest journalism
Answer choice (D) is a contrapositive of the above chain.
Outside control" is also in there, but for the sake of clarity I've dropped that term in order to highlight the reasoning behind answer choice (D). however, when something comes "with" another thing, that's again conditional: subsidy outside control. As you can see, there's a lot going on here, and it's tricky! This is why you are missing problems like this—they are hard.
One more side comment: "will" is an absolute, and often is conditional. If you say, "If Nathan does not study, then he will fail," that yields the following relationship:
StudyNathan Fail Nathan
There are other uses of "will," though, so be careful with it.
Ok, my goal here isn't to explain each problem, but to draw out the larger elements so we can see why you are having problems with some of these. You're nailing whether an argument is present, you're properly identifying the conclusions when they are present, you are seeing the general type of language in use, and often your diagrams are correct. So, those aren't the root problems, and, being able to do all of that is a great sign for continued improvement! The problems are that sometimes you aren't seeing the language they use as conditional, and sometimes you are just getting caught up in the complex web of connections they weave. Those two factors are actually what cause these problems to be hard in the first place, and so really you are having issues exactly where you'd expect there to be problems. Don't let that discourage you! Instead, buckle down on these problems and when you are studying, break them into component pieces until you understand every single step. Then, look at what was and was not important in determining the correct answer. That will help sharpen your LSAT radar and make you a better test taker. But again, overall this is good news
Third, I want to make a general comment about diagramming. You said, "I don't know how to diagram this stimulus." Always remember that diagramming is a tool, not a necessity. You only need to diagram when you think it will help you. But, the nice thing about diagramming a lot while you are practicing is that it helps prove that you know what was said. I always tell students to diagram a lot at first just so you master it, and then as time passes you should diagram less and less because what eventually occurs is that when you encounter a conditional relationship the "picture" of the relationships will instantly springs to mind.
Ok, hopefully the comments above give you some things to think about as well as apply while you are studying. Thanks and have a great weekend!
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/