- Thu Oct 05, 2017 8:42 pm
#40339
Hi there,
I've been doing some of the logic games in the game type training sections (I photo copy them rather than writing on the book). In the instructions it's advised to do the hypotheticals right beside the specific questions, but at least in the book version of these game sets, there is sometimes no room to write the local hypotheticals because the questions are so close together.
Will this also be the case in some game sets during the actual LSAT or will there be more room than shown in the book, and if not, how do we work around this issue because having to draw the local hypotheticals further away from the actual question can be both confusing at times as well as time consuming as your eyes move back and forth across the page. Thanks.
I've been doing some of the logic games in the game type training sections (I photo copy them rather than writing on the book). In the instructions it's advised to do the hypotheticals right beside the specific questions, but at least in the book version of these game sets, there is sometimes no room to write the local hypotheticals because the questions are so close together.
Will this also be the case in some game sets during the actual LSAT or will there be more room than shown in the book, and if not, how do we work around this issue because having to draw the local hypotheticals further away from the actual question can be both confusing at times as well as time consuming as your eyes move back and forth across the page. Thanks.