Cracking the LSAT Mindset (free worksheet)

Wanted to share the first step to cracking the LSAT Mindset with a fun little game from my LSAT courses.

In the worksheet...(err, I mean "game," cuz it's fun, right?), I'm giving you 21 examples of flawed arguments. They're not so different from the ones you'll see on the LSAT.
LSAT Blog's Flawed Arguments Worksheet


YOUR MISSION: Write down what's wrong with each.

Click this link to get started (File --> Download As PDF):

LSAT Mindset - Flawed Arguments Worksheet


Enjoy!

Steve Schwartz


P.S. Let me know which of those arguments you think is the most ridiculous!

P.P.S. Here are the "answers" to the worksheet.



Recommended Resources:

1. LSAT Courses
The best of my LSAT material with exclusive access to attend my Live Online LSAT Master Classes + Q&As, and on-demand video lessons you can watch anytime. Plus, LSAT study plans to keep you on track. Save hundreds of dollars with an LSAT course package.

2. Logical Reasoning Explanations
The explanations that should have come with the LSAT. These don't just fall back on "out of scope," but actually tell you why the wrong answers are wrong, why the right answers are right, and the easiest way to get the correct answer.

3. Logical Reasoning Cheat Sheet
Based on what I'd typically do in college: read what the professor emphasized and condense it all onto a single piece of paper. It gave me a quick reference, making things a lot less threatening and a lot more manageable.





No comments:

Post a Comment