- Fri Oct 04, 2019 6:45 pm
#68610
That's a more complex question that it may seem, LearntheLSAT, because there are often multiple flaws in a stimulus, and there are also multiple ways to describe a single flaw. Your prephrase is the right place to start, but if no answer matches it then you can try eliminating wrong answers instead. For example, in this case, if the problem was conditional, it would still be about the past. "When we lost, she didn't play, so when we won she must have played" would be such a flaw, and that's answer A - but it doesn't describe what happened in the stimulus because the author concluded nothing about what happened in the past! Instead, he made a prediction for the future, which is beyond the scope of the conditional relationship presented to us. If a flaw answer describes something that didn't happen in the stimulus, it's a wrong answer!
In the long run, it's going to be all about practice, familiarity, and confidence. As you do more of these, studying from both your mistakes and your successes, you will become more accurate in your prephrasing and more confident in those prephrases, and you will less and less often get caught up in attractive wrong answers. Don't let your past mistakes lead to self-doubt - instead, let them guide you to learn new lessons and build your confidence that next time, you won't make that mistake!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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https://twitter.com/LSATadam