-  Tue Feb 07, 2017 5:25 pm
					 #32550
							   
										
										
					
					
							Hello all,
I seem to have some trouble with extremely wordy science stimuli in particular. An example would be the number 7 example of chapter 3 in the LR Bible.
However, I have noticed that with a very wordy stimulus like that, often times it is just a fact set, and the question will be a must be true at which point the correct answer is typically just a paraphrase of something that was said in the stimulus.
How accurate is this and is this a decent approach for must be true questions (looking for a paraphrase)?
Up until now, frankly, the super wordy stimuli have intimidated me and they have overwhelmed me, but I believe I'm starting to kind "crack a code" here, if you will.
Am I on the right track?
					
										
					  															  								 I seem to have some trouble with extremely wordy science stimuli in particular. An example would be the number 7 example of chapter 3 in the LR Bible.
However, I have noticed that with a very wordy stimulus like that, often times it is just a fact set, and the question will be a must be true at which point the correct answer is typically just a paraphrase of something that was said in the stimulus.
How accurate is this and is this a decent approach for must be true questions (looking for a paraphrase)?
Up until now, frankly, the super wordy stimuli have intimidated me and they have overwhelmed me, but I believe I'm starting to kind "crack a code" here, if you will.
Am I on the right track?



 
											 ). What I always say is learn the right methods first and master them, then change them only if you have a special situation come up like those above.
 ). What I always say is learn the right methods first and master them, then change them only if you have a special situation come up like those above.