Well, you need to lay out your premises. There's often a wording change between the premises and the conclusion. The premises might say something like "most..." and the conclusion says "more...", or the premises might say "If A, then not B" and the conclusion says "If B, then not A." It's mostly a matter of practice once you're really good at laying out the argument. There's only a few tricks the LSAT uses.
Do you have something on how to find the gap in the argument
Well, you need to lay out your premises.
There's often a wording change between the premises and the conclusion. The premises might say something like "most..." and the conclusion says "more...", or the premises might say "If A, then not B" and the conclusion says "If B, then not A."
It's mostly a matter of practice once you're really good at laying out the argument. There's only a few tricks the LSAT uses.