Still having problem with timing. I guess at the same time I brute force PTs, after reviewing I have to simulate it again using all the right methods and strategies. Best memorize them, and next time revisiting the Pt, hopefully getting better at timing issues.
You don't need to re-do the whole PT over again - focus on particular aspects of the test to re-do and re-review after you've already reviewed once. For example, try a specific game or passage over again. Or pick out LR questions by type or concept - the parallel and parallel flaw, the conditional logic-based problems, necessary assumptions, for example.
Noted. I suspect the one-fingered method of typing would still not be the fastest. One would have to experiment, though, and be willing to try new methods.
You are so smart, so much of what you say makes sense
Still having problem with timing. I guess at the same time I brute force PTs, after reviewing I have to simulate it again using all the right methods and strategies. Best memorize them, and next time revisiting the Pt, hopefully getting better at timing issues.
You don't need to re-do the whole PT over again - focus on particular aspects of the test to re-do and re-review after you've already reviewed once. For example, try a specific game or passage over again. Or pick out LR questions by type or concept - the parallel and parallel flaw, the conditional logic-based problems, necessary assumptions, for example.
Some of us have only one hand.
Noted. I suspect the one-fingered method of typing would still not be the fastest. One would have to experiment, though, and be willing to try new methods.
@@LuminateLSAT Agreed. Use all five fingers not just one. I knew only one person that did two-finger typing well.