- Wed Aug 29, 2012 5:08 pm
#5043
The best advice I have for improving speed is also the simplest advice - practice, practice, practice. The more familiar you are with the games, and the often-confusing language used by the authors to create the rules, the more likely you will be in any given game to recognize the correct base, the correct diagram of a rule, and the ever-so-important inferences to be made. As you get better, and faster, at recognizing those patterns, you will get faster and more confident with your diagrams, picking up speed overall.
I do have one another piece of advice, which may sound counter-intuitive, and that's this: don't rush. Specifically, take your time with the diagram before moving on to the questions. Are there inferences to be made? Rules that you can link together? Does this game call for the use of templates? Often I find that students who move too quickly to the questions end up missing some of these key points, and they end up losing time because the questions are that much harder. Taking your time on the diagram and finding those inferences, links, and templates (when called for) can pay off big time when you get to the questions and are able to move through them much faster than otherwise.
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT Instructor
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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