Which one of the following partners cannot have the third highest salary?

rjaf123 on May 25, 2020

Practicing

Hello. I am just starting LSATMAX and am really enjoying the tutoring! My question is how often would you say to review THESE SPECIFIC hw problems? Or is it just a one and done concept to get the general idea of logic games for the future? For the hw I got 9/11. What would you suggest for me to do moving forward other than progressing with the class day to day? Thank you!

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rjaf123 on May 26, 2020

I would really appreciate it if someone could answer this ^^^. Thank you.

BenMingov on May 28, 2020

Hi Rjaf123, thanks for reaching out.

I am glad that you are having a good experience thus far!

None of the homework problems that you work through will appear on an actual future LSAT exam. (Unless it is undisclosed then it is possible, I believe?) But it is safe to assume that each problem you see, you will see only once. The value of these individual games and logical reasoning problems is that you will familiarize yourself with typical question formats, common reasoning themes, and the methods to tackle them. So even when the wording or situation is tweaked, once you have gone through enough problems and thoroughly reviewed both the correct and incorrect responses, you will be able to better anticipate the correct answer choice and work through the material.

Studying using the schedule provided by the course is a great tool. However, I would like to add that realizing you can be flexible with the timing is key. At some point or another, every student (including myself) gets stuck on a specific aspect of the test that they find more difficult than others. Perhaps a specific game type or logical reasoning question type. It is important to let yourself take extra time on these topics and to ensure solid understanding instead of skimming past. And also try to incorporate scheduled breaks from the LSAT in your study, be it weekends or a cutoff point in the evenings. I also recommend trying to take a week off every now and then to let yourself have a mental rest from the LSAT. When you come back you will likely feel refreshed and ready to tackle the test. Lastly, treat practice tests not as practice, but as a tool to determine your current level. Take them at regular intervals but do not replace real learning with taking practice tests. This is a common error that many students fall into.

I hope this helps. Please let me know if you have any other questions.

rjaf123 on June 6, 2020

Thank you for this detailed response. Very helpful.