The Powerscore trilogy is considered perhaps the gold standard in LSAT prep. I chose to use some of the most prominent resources for studying logical reasoning. If you’re looking for something more introductory, try this blog post instead. It presumes you have a strong foundation in LR already and are looking to up your game. I want to share those insights with you here.īut first, here’s a link to the spreadsheet I created to organize the information.Īlso, please note that this post isn’t designed to be an introduction to question types. This might sound like a pedantic exercise, but I actually learned a lot about the LSAT by examining so closely how these different materials carve up the Logical Reasoning world. What this means in everyday English is that I looked through four prominent study materials ( Powerscore, The LSAT Trainer, Khan Academy, and The Loophole in LSAT Logical Reasoning), and I attempted to create an organized list of who calls what by what name.įor example, Powerscore refers to Must Be True questions, but LSAT Trainer calls them Inference questions, Khan Academy calls them “Identify an Entailment”, and the Loophole in LSAT LR splits them into either Inference or Fill-In questions. I undertook an interesting (and surprisingly time-consuming) project recently creating a concordance of Logical Reasoning question types by publisher. Ever get confused by the different terminology that’s out there about the LSAT?
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