- Thu Jul 26, 2012 1:37 pm
#4585
Disclaimer: I am thinking out loud here voodoo, but I hope that by responding to you I can be affirmed in my thinking or corrected by my mistakes. I am not pretending I am a teacher or really understand fully what I am doing (yet!).
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Looks to me like : "IF you want to get home, THEN you need to take the train". I have to remember to re-word in situations like this to an if-then statement that follows the author's logic of the actual sentence. The way to get home is the train, right? Only the train.
the way you charted it sounds to me like: "If you take the train, then you will get home". Which could, or could not be true but doesn't follow the conditional reasoning laid out.
It's a, uh...mistaken reversal?
I am just learning this now, so maybe I am wrong..mods?
If I am right, then it looks like you are depending too much on the geographical location of the conditions in relation to the indicators. Powerscore starts out with questions that clearly relate the indicators and conditions, so that we can learn what the indicators are. But LSAC isn't going to make it easy. So once we recognize indicators, we still have to know how to logically arrange premises when indicators are placed in a purposely confusing way, or absent all together (I hate those)!
I just had a problem last night (that I got wrong!) That has the Sufficent condition in the first sentence, and the necessary condition in the third sentence of a multi-sentence problem. I have to become more sophisticated and move past just recognizing indicators, and move into something like this :1. look for indicators in the whole problem2.understand what the question is saying 3. apply any indicators I found. And I have to remember that multiple indicators, and chains can throw me for a huge loop. If I stop at My first "Only" and say, Okay! the next condition is necessary...I will continue in frustration.
Actually mods, it would be good if you could address p.2-39 in the homework book, problem 1. "People with serious financial problems". Actually, I got all the drills in this section wrong, except for problem 3...and I didn't chart it right :/ (should I post this as a new post?)
As a fellow traveller, I would say: take it one step at at a time. If you trip on the second step, go back and review the first, then try again. If you trip on step 3, go back and review 1 and 2 then try again etc....Powerscore does a pretty good job of 'layering' but, I have to recognize that I can't speed it up by skipping a step. Comprehension first, then speed.
Are you using Powerscore bibles? Or are you in a class?
______________
Looks to me like : "IF you want to get home, THEN you need to take the train". I have to remember to re-word in situations like this to an if-then statement that follows the author's logic of the actual sentence. The way to get home is the train, right? Only the train.
the way you charted it sounds to me like: "If you take the train, then you will get home". Which could, or could not be true but doesn't follow the conditional reasoning laid out.
It's a, uh...mistaken reversal?
I am just learning this now, so maybe I am wrong..mods?
If I am right, then it looks like you are depending too much on the geographical location of the conditions in relation to the indicators. Powerscore starts out with questions that clearly relate the indicators and conditions, so that we can learn what the indicators are. But LSAC isn't going to make it easy. So once we recognize indicators, we still have to know how to logically arrange premises when indicators are placed in a purposely confusing way, or absent all together (I hate those)!
I just had a problem last night (that I got wrong!) That has the Sufficent condition in the first sentence, and the necessary condition in the third sentence of a multi-sentence problem. I have to become more sophisticated and move past just recognizing indicators, and move into something like this :1. look for indicators in the whole problem2.understand what the question is saying 3. apply any indicators I found. And I have to remember that multiple indicators, and chains can throw me for a huge loop. If I stop at My first "Only" and say, Okay! the next condition is necessary...I will continue in frustration.
Actually mods, it would be good if you could address p.2-39 in the homework book, problem 1. "People with serious financial problems". Actually, I got all the drills in this section wrong, except for problem 3...and I didn't chart it right :/ (should I post this as a new post?)
As a fellow traveller, I would say: take it one step at at a time. If you trip on the second step, go back and review the first, then try again. If you trip on step 3, go back and review 1 and 2 then try again etc....Powerscore does a pretty good job of 'layering' but, I have to recognize that I can't speed it up by skipping a step. Comprehension first, then speed.
Are you using Powerscore bibles? Or are you in a class?