7:30 May I ask you if we had to get the main conclusion in this paragraph, it would be "This shows the campaign against drink-driving has succeeded", right? why couldn't it be the next phrase: "consequently, the government ought to..." ? Anyway, I appreciate a lot what you are doing, english is not my first language and I was struggling a bit with time, you have been such angels in my studies, thank you so much!!!!
That sentence "consequently" would actually be the main conclusion if you had to pick one out! This shows .... this is the conclusion of the argument outlined before. So the main conclusion doesn't follow without this mini conclusion being true. With flaw questions, it's the argument that you should be attacking. Hope that makes sense :)
What about the 2D and 3D trick questions? I didn’t have any of what u had on ur test… I had a speed test and a 2D n 3D part… whole time I’m studying what I seen u post
Oh yes, this is a really good point actually. I'll post an example explanation tomorrow. But to quickly explain, the x and y shouldn't be matched to sentences. They should be paired to the correct subject and used to compare relationships. So e.g. x may in fact be 3 sentences that together express 1 main idea. A bit difficult to explain without a question example but I hope that makes some sense.
Depends on what works best for you, definitely not a one-way is the best type of thing. I would probably time myself answering the paper both ways and see which one I score higher in/finish more quickly!
I love your videos, but u messed me up a bit. At first you were saying that you should just skim through the whole passage without detail reading and thus u should identify the argument. Look out for key words like therefor therefore, should, ought to be, etc. but here you’re actually reading the questions?
Oh, I can see how that could be unclear. Looking for keywords is a supporting tool that helps you skim the passage faster. You should be using key connectives to help you get through it faster and identify unnecessary sections. Also, depends on the question type a bit of course! Some you can just really skip right to the "Therefore" and ignore the rest entirely. I would not usually read it line by line but I wanted to show how you paraphrase as you go along, which is also a tool to help you skim through the passage. I hope that clears it up a little bit!
Do you know which type of question you are commonly having trouble with? It would be really useful to know if it's the problem solving or critical thinking and within that, which types.
НУЕТ тапсыратындар, удачи!
Сол үшін қарап отырмын
Рахмеееет🥹❤
I only have 5 days left... Thank you!
I'm still scoring highly, at the top end of 60 and mid of 70, but this is very much appreciated
Are you in England doing your test? Good luck
how it is gone?
@@NezanPlay i was rejected, sadly, but I'm happy I tried :)
Is an ''argument'' same as the ''conclusion''? For example is finding a flaw 'in the argument above' means a flow in the paragraph's conclusion?
7:30 May I ask you if we had to get the main conclusion in this paragraph, it would be "This shows the campaign against drink-driving has succeeded", right? why couldn't it be the next phrase: "consequently, the government ought to..." ?
Anyway, I appreciate a lot what you are doing, english is not my first language and I was struggling a bit with time, you have been such angels in my studies, thank you so much!!!!
That sentence "consequently" would actually be the main conclusion if you had to pick one out!
This shows .... this is the conclusion of the argument outlined before. So the main conclusion doesn't follow without this mini conclusion being true.
With flaw questions, it's the argument that you should be attacking. Hope that makes sense :)
Thank you for thisss!! Its really really helpful🥺
Couple of weeks is last minute?? Oh shit
Lol do you have yours tomorrow too. This is my second day of revision 🥲
@@emilykatethompson2827 yh same. I basically started today bc I was rly sick for three days. 😩
@@gaby6406 well good luck!! i’m not feeling confident at all, just excited to get it over with. what course did you apply for?
@@emilykatethompson2827 I'm applying for PPE at Wadham. What u doing? Good luck ofc 🙏🙏
I'm sure you'll be fine haha, good luck today :)
Are you making a vid today on the parallel reasoning questions with a messed up structure? :)
What about the 2D and 3D trick questions? I didn’t have any of what u had on ur test… I had a speed test and a 2D n 3D part… whole time I’m studying what I seen u post
What about the parallel reasoning questions which have a completely messed up structure???
Oh yes, this is a really good point actually. I'll post an example explanation tomorrow.
But to quickly explain, the x and y shouldn't be matched to sentences. They should be paired to the correct subject and used to compare relationships. So e.g. x may in fact be 3 sentences that together express 1 main idea. A bit difficult to explain without a question example but I hope that makes some sense.
@@examrizz. Thanks so much, that does make general sense. Thanks for doing a vid that would be super helpful.
Would you not suggest just following the order of the questions
Depends on what works best for you, definitely not a one-way is the best type of thing. I would probably time myself answering the paper both ways and see which one I score higher in/finish more quickly!
Thank you!
I love your videos, but u messed me up a bit. At first you were saying that you should just skim through the whole passage without detail reading and thus u should identify the argument. Look out for key words like therefor therefore, should, ought to be, etc. but here you’re actually reading the questions?
Oh, I can see how that could be unclear. Looking for keywords is a supporting tool that helps you skim the passage faster. You should be using key connectives to help you get through it faster and identify unnecessary sections. Also, depends on the question type a bit of course! Some you can just really skip right to the "Therefore" and ignore the rest entirely.
I would not usually read it line by line but I wanted to show how you paraphrase as you go along, which is also a tool to help you skim through the passage.
I hope that clears it up a little bit!
What would you do to improve if your TSA score is plateauing around 60
Do you know which type of question you are commonly having trouble with? It would be really useful to know if it's the problem solving or critical thinking and within that, which types.
@@examrizz. I think problem solving are the hardest
@@Surfing566 so you need to focus in on those then
I hate critical thinking and problem solving