- Sat Jul 17, 2021 8:32 pm
#88855
While those templates might be a little helpful, GGIBA003@FIU.EDU, I personally found them to be a little too empty and uncertain to be of much use, and thus not worth the time they took to create. I say this as an avid fan of doing templates, too - this game just doesn't really get much easier when you do them, in my opinion. For example, when the P/G block is in spaces 1 and 4, where do we put the LO block? It still has two options, and with one of them (LO in 2 and 3) the remaining variables are all pretty much random in the last three spaces. Something similar happens when P/G is in 3 and 6. In fact, the only template that locks down the placement of the LG block is when the P/G block is in 2 and 5, forcing LO to be between them. And of course every one of those templates leaves us wondering about the order of P and G, so a local question that places G or P in space 4 would still leave us guessing as to which template we would be in, since the other could be in space 1 or in space 7.
Then again, 4 templates for 7 questions, even when the templates are a little light on inferences, isn't bad, and you should be done with them fairly quickly, so it's not a huge loss of time. So while we might not recommend templates in this case, I'd say you aren't wrong for going down that path, and if they helped you finish the game quickly, confidently, and accurately, then more power to you!
Then again, 4 templates for 7 questions, even when the templates are a little light on inferences, isn't bad, and you should be done with them fairly quickly, so it's not a huge loss of time. So while we might not recommend templates in this case, I'd say you aren't wrong for going down that path, and if they helped you finish the game quickly, confidently, and accurately, then more power to you!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/LSATadam
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/LSATadam