- Tue Aug 25, 2020 1:16 pm
#78407
Hello
I am looking for advice on perspective reading comp questions. I take the August LSAT and as part of my final week of studying I've been reviewing my question tracker as well as all the tests I've taken to look for patterns. I consistently miss 3-5 on reading but I noticed that a fairly high percentage of missed question are AP or AP/SP questions. They are usually harder question (lower than 60% correct rate) and usually are some variation of "The Author (or author and subject) would agree with which of the following statements"
My approach is to first reference the authors viewpoint/tone and additionally refer to the specific lines for SR and CR questions. I try to prephrase something general but its hard to do anything specific with these type questions. Then I try to eliminate answers based on viewstamp and or the fact test. On the questions I am missing, this usually eliminates 2-3 answer choices. Where I am having issues is the remaining 2-3 answer choices are some combination of viewpoint type answers but without a clear or strong tone, and more factual statements like inferences and assumptions that could conceivably be true based on the authors argument. But either none of the remaining choices seem great, or multiple seem like the author would agree. Also, I usually do not eliminate the correct answer, but instead choose the wrong answer of the two or three I left as contenders.
In this type of situation, is there a better way to eliminate wrong answers and/or better identify the correct answer?
Thanks for the help and I would appreciate any sort of guidance/advice even if there is no definite answer
I am looking for advice on perspective reading comp questions. I take the August LSAT and as part of my final week of studying I've been reviewing my question tracker as well as all the tests I've taken to look for patterns. I consistently miss 3-5 on reading but I noticed that a fairly high percentage of missed question are AP or AP/SP questions. They are usually harder question (lower than 60% correct rate) and usually are some variation of "The Author (or author and subject) would agree with which of the following statements"
My approach is to first reference the authors viewpoint/tone and additionally refer to the specific lines for SR and CR questions. I try to prephrase something general but its hard to do anything specific with these type questions. Then I try to eliminate answers based on viewstamp and or the fact test. On the questions I am missing, this usually eliminates 2-3 answer choices. Where I am having issues is the remaining 2-3 answer choices are some combination of viewpoint type answers but without a clear or strong tone, and more factual statements like inferences and assumptions that could conceivably be true based on the authors argument. But either none of the remaining choices seem great, or multiple seem like the author would agree. Also, I usually do not eliminate the correct answer, but instead choose the wrong answer of the two or three I left as contenders.
In this type of situation, is there a better way to eliminate wrong answers and/or better identify the correct answer?
Thanks for the help and I would appreciate any sort of guidance/advice even if there is no definite answer