- Mon Dec 03, 2018 6:19 pm
#60879
Mr. Cheese,
Often on the LSAT a word or phrase can be linked back to an earlier reference. Carefully and active reading will help you make those connections, so beware of interpreting sentences in isolation. Here, we are told in the first sentence that painted spiders have stickier webs than other "spiders that share the same habitat." In the third sentence, we are told how spiders, in general, prey on insects. Following the flow of the stimulus would lead to interpreting "its competitors" to mean types of spiders in the same habitat whose webs are less sticky.
One way you can track these references is to draw arrows while reading, when you realize the stimulus is referencing something mentioned earlier. This technique can be helpful on both logical reasoning and reading comprehension sections.
I hope this helps!
Often on the LSAT a word or phrase can be linked back to an earlier reference. Carefully and active reading will help you make those connections, so beware of interpreting sentences in isolation. Here, we are told in the first sentence that painted spiders have stickier webs than other "spiders that share the same habitat." In the third sentence, we are told how spiders, in general, prey on insects. Following the flow of the stimulus would lead to interpreting "its competitors" to mean types of spiders in the same habitat whose webs are less sticky.
One way you can track these references is to draw arrows while reading, when you realize the stimulus is referencing something mentioned earlier. This technique can be helpful on both logical reasoning and reading comprehension sections.
I hope this helps!