thank you so much for going through logic of incorrect answer choices. so many don't go over the problems, but I think it's so valuable to realizing my incorrect logic. Cheers!
Thank you for discussing the heuristics you use to tackle these kinds of questions. These questions I find easily the most time-consuming in LR. Every shortcut is helpful!
This entire playlist during test week and gave me so much relative information for test. I feel even more confident in my approach for the test day! These videos are amazing and very informative. THANK YOU!!!!
Thank you very much for the lesson. These types of questions have been giving me so much trouble. Was very helpful to have it broken down into simple parts.
Hi Liv, thank you for the feedback. We're working on LG and RC at the moment so it might be a while before we can get to harder assumption family questions here. But we do have that in our larger vision for the channel.
In some cases of the conclusion would a valid contrapostive be a possible answer or for parallels are we specifically looking for the exact same structure?
That's a frustrating aspect of parallel questions. We're looking for the closest match. Let's suppose the argument is valid and reasons by contrapositive. The best match would be an answer that also reasons by contrapositive. But in the absence of such an answer, one that reasons by positive reasoning would also work. Contrapositive Structure A --> B ~B ------------ ~A Positive Structure A --> B A ----------- B
Can we do it, moving on to the next question without reading all the options as there are 35 mins and 26-28 questions? You are sure we won't lose anything?
In some cases we'd recommend it, and in others we wouldn't. If you're aiming for a 170+ score, you should read every answer choice. If your goal score is 160+ and you're confident in your work and you're short on time, then it's likely a smart move.
There are questions that feel like Parallel reasoning that involve the word Principle: "Which of the following most conforms to the principle illustrated in the argument above" For that sort of stem, you have to extract some general principle from the argument (much like how we extract a general recipe for the argument on Parallel) and then find an answer choice that matches that same general principle. But overall, Principle isn't a question type. The word "principle" gets used in a variety of question tasks, some of which feel like Parallel, some like Strengthen, some like Sufficient Assumption, some like Necessary Assumption, some like Most Supported, and occasionally even some like Weaken / Must Be False.
Hi.. I love your videos =) Can you tell me what kind of software you're using for these videos? Is it a PPT? Or something way cooler? Thanks in advance =)
Hi Shouri, we start with PowerPoint slides to map out the lesson arc. The artwork is designed in Illustrator, the audio is recorded in Audition, and we stitch all together in After Effects. So glad you like the videos!
thank you so much for going through logic of incorrect answer choices. so many don't go over the problems, but I think it's so valuable to realizing my incorrect logic. Cheers!
I can't say how much this channel has me in developing strategies on attacking questions........ thank you!!!!!!
Thank you for discussing the heuristics you use to tackle these kinds of questions. These questions I find easily the most time-consuming in LR. Every shortcut is helpful!
This entire playlist during test week and gave me so much relative information for test. I feel even more confident in my approach for the test day! These videos are amazing and very informative. THANK YOU!!!!
How’d you do?! I signed up for a subscription on the website. Testing in September
@@alysedianecani had a seven point increase.
@@lamarcuusbuckner7156 that’s awesome.
You explain these concepts so well. I wish I had more money to hire you as a tutor 😭 I’ll continue to watch these gems 😍
@6:59 typically the option I go for too
This helps a lot. I’ve been having trouble with these ones.
Thank you very much for the lesson. These types of questions have been giving me so much trouble. Was very helpful to have it broken down into simple parts.
Thank you for the videos, please make more for harder flaw/assumption family (strengthen/weaken) questions please
Hi Liv, thank you for the feedback. We're working on LG and RC at the moment so it might be a while before we can get to harder assumption family questions here. But we do have that in our larger vision for the channel.
In some cases of the conclusion would a valid contrapostive be a possible answer or for parallels are we specifically looking for the exact same structure?
That's a frustrating aspect of parallel questions. We're looking for the closest match. Let's suppose the argument is valid and reasons by contrapositive. The best match would be an answer that also reasons by contrapositive. But in the absence of such an answer, one that reasons by positive reasoning would also work.
Contrapositive Structure
A --> B
~B
------------
~A
Positive Structure
A --> B
A
-----------
B
@@LSATLab I was about to ask this same question. Thank you for your response!
Thanks for giving me a big picture idea of what is happening
Can we do it, moving on to the next question without reading all the options as there are 35 mins and 26-28 questions? You are sure we won't lose anything?
In some cases we'd recommend it, and in others we wouldn't. If you're aiming for a 170+ score, you should read every answer choice. If your goal score is 160+ and you're confident in your work and you're short on time, then it's likely a smart move.
Hi thanks I for your useful vidios
I wanna know that are parallel questions the same as principle ?
There are questions that feel like Parallel reasoning that involve the word Principle:
"Which of the following most conforms to the principle illustrated in the argument above"
For that sort of stem, you have to extract some general principle from the argument (much like how we extract a general recipe for the argument on Parallel) and then find an answer choice that matches that same general principle.
But overall, Principle isn't a question type. The word "principle" gets used in a variety of question tasks, some of which feel like Parallel, some like Strengthen, some like Sufficient Assumption, some like Necessary Assumption, some like Most Supported, and occasionally even some like Weaken / Must Be False.
Hi.. I love your videos =) Can you tell me what kind of software you're using for these videos? Is it a PPT? Or something way cooler? Thanks in advance =)
Hi Shouri, we start with PowerPoint slides to map out the lesson arc. The artwork is designed in Illustrator, the audio is recorded in Audition, and we stitch all together in After Effects. So glad you like the videos!
BEAUTIFUL
Since you said it in the video???