You’re invited to HighPass’s live online class. We’ve flipped the traditional classroom. At HighPass you learn the fundamentals with video lessons before you take on more advanced concepts in class. Taught by Matt Sherman and Patrick Tyrrell, who together have 35 years of experience in helping students achieve amazing LSAT scores.
In Stacked Ordering games, a good organization reveals hidden inferences that are the key to quickly solving this game type. This lesson looks at how to spot one of these games, how to set one up, and when to use frames.
Stacked Ordering
Instructor: Matt Sherman Tue Aug 9 3:30 PM (PT)
Parallel questions ask you to match reasoning between the logic presented in the question stem and the answer choices. It is a rare but important question type to recognize and tackle.
Parallel
Instructor: Matt Sherman Tue Aug 9 6:00 PM (PT)
Locate Detail questions ask for something the passage explicitly stated. Make your hunt through the passage efficient by using the question's Target to tailor your approach.
Locate Detail
Instructor: Laura Damone Wed Aug 10 10:00 AM (PT)
Frames are a powerful tool for some games but a total quagmire for others. Learn when and how to deploy this advanced technique.
Frames (advanced)
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Wed Aug 10 5:00 PM (PT)
Inference questions in Reading Comprehension are about what the author says, what the author implies, and what can be indirectly inferred from the author's statements.
Inference
Instructor: Matt Sherman Thu Aug 11 3:30 PM (PT)
Mapping games present rules for location—whether distance or direction. This lesson will teach you how to map the rules out yourself and understand how to apply them.
Mapping
Instructor: Matt Sherman Thu Aug 11 6:00 PM (PT)
Standard Grouping games ask you to assign a set of elements to one or more of several teams. Learn how to create an effective game board, notate the rules, and create frames for this game type.
Standard Grouping
Instructor: Laura Damone Fri Aug 12 10:00 AM (PT)
The LSAT Writing section is the only required section you don't take on the same day as the scored sections of the LSAT. It's designed to measure how clearly you can articulate an argument.
LSAT Writing
Instructor: Matt Sherman Sun Aug 14 2:30 PM (PT)
Strengthen questions on the LSAT are common and have a wide range of difficulty. In this lesson, we present the Reasoning Structures to look out for and the Trap Answers you need to know.
Strengthen
Instructor: Matt Sherman Sun Aug 14 2:30 PM (PT)
Sufficient Assumption questions are a challenging question type that ask us to supply the missing link in an argument.
Sufficient Assumption
Instructor: Laura Damone Mon Aug 15 10:00 AM (PT)
Must Be False questions are very similar to Must Be True questions in Logical Reasoning. The right answer to these is the logical opposite of a stated claim or an inference of the claims. Correct answers usually involve combining ideas via Conditional or Quantified language.
Must Be True / False
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Mon Aug 15 5:00 PM (PT)
Stacked Grouping games are about organizing your game board well. Learn how to pick a variable for the base of your game board and make inferences before you answer the questions.
Stacked Grouping
Instructor: Matt Sherman Tue Aug 16 3:30 PM (PT)
This class will cover the most common pathways to scoring 170+ on the LSAT and how to know which paths are open to you.
How To Score 170+
Instructor: Matt Sherman Tue Aug 16 6:00 PM (PT)
Author's Intent questions ask about the purpose or meaning of text. Learn where and how to read to get into the author's head and vanquish these manageable questions.
Author's Intent
Instructor: Laura Damone Wed Aug 17 10:00 AM (PT)
Questions in comparative passage sets might test only one of the passages, overlapping parts of the two passages, differences between the two passages, or the relationship between the passages. We'll work on level 4 and 5 examples of comparative passages.
Comparative Passages (advanced)
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Wed Aug 17 5:00 PM (PT)
Inference questions in Reading Comprehension are about what the author says, what the author implies, and what can be indirectly inferred from the author's statements.
Finding Frameworks
Instructor: Matt Sherman Thu Aug 18 3:30 PM (PT)
Must Be True questions have a right answer you can prove. Learn how they rely heavily on conditional logic and comparative reasoning.
Must Be True
Instructor: Matt Sherman Thu Aug 18 6:00 PM (PT)
In Stacked Ordering Games, one row tracks the players on the number line while another tracks some other detail or player for each spot. Learn to use Rosters to keep important info front and center and make game changing inferences.
Stacked Ordering
Instructor: Laura Damone Fri Aug 19 10:00 AM (PT)
Questions asking what is most supported, what can be most reasonably inferred, what someone would be most likely to agree with, or what the passage suggests are among the toughest in RC. The correct answers are tortured rephrasings of something we were told or they are reasonable truisms we can derive from things we've been told.
Most Supported
Instructor: Matt Sherman Sun Aug 21 3:00 PM (PT)
The rules all come together in Tree Ordering games. Connect the rules to build trees that help you see implicit relationships within the game.
Tree Ordering
Instructor: Matt Sherman Sun Aug 21 5:00 PM (PT)
Principle questions come in two main flavors. Learn how to support an argument with a general rule, and how to spot an argument that conforms to a given rule.
Principles
Instructor: Laura Damone Mon Aug 22 10:00 AM (PT)
Strengthen and Weaken questions rarely use conditional logic. They deal more with Comparisons, Plans/Recommendations, Predictions, and Causal Hypotheses. Level 4 and 5 examples are often challenging because it's hard to understand the impact of the correct answer or because the impact is surprisingly small.
Strengthen / Weaken (advanced)
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Mon Aug 22 5:00 PM (PT)
Hybrid games combine ordering and grouping for an extra special challenge. In this lesson, we cover how to spot one, how to set one up, and what to look for when creating frames.
Hybrid
Instructor: Matt Sherman Tue Aug 23 3:30 PM (PT)
We'll work on chunking, self-summarizing, using frameworks, and differentiating big ideas from support, so that we can be better at finding and retaining the big ideas in the passage.
Big Picture Reading
Instructor: Matt Sherman Tue Aug 23 6:00 PM (PT)
Opinion questions hinge on who believes what, and to what degree they believe it.
Opinion
Instructor: Laura Damone Wed Aug 24 10:00 AM (PT)
Subgroups can add a layer of difficulty to games of any type. We'll look at level 4 and 5 examples of these games.
Subgroups (advanced)
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Wed Aug 24 5:00 PM (PT)
Get to know the frameworks for RC passages. Practice using early clues to pick a framework and then using that framework to focus yourself on the two or three biggest ideas.
Problem/Solution
Instructor: Matt Sherman Thu Aug 25 3:30 PM (PT)
Sufficient Assumption questions are a challenging question type that ask us to supply the missing link in an argument.
Sufficient Assumption
Instructor: Matt Sherman Thu Aug 25 6:00 PM (PT)
Options games are the weirdos of the Grouping world. They have more groups than variables, and your job is to figure out which combination of repeating variables each group has. Learn where to look for the waterfall of inferences to conquer this rare and beautiful game type.
Options Grouping
Instructor: Laura Damone Fri Aug 26 10:00 AM (PT)
Principle questions are a twist that most commonly show up on Most Supported and Strengthen, but we'll also see it on Parallel, Necessary Assumption, and Weaken now and then. Correct answers heavily test our understanding of the direction of the relationship.
Principle
Instructor: Matt Sherman Sun Aug 28 2:30 PM (PT)
Standard Ordering games are the most common game type in Logic Games. Learn how to manage different rule types and where to look for valuable inferences!
Standard Ordering
Instructor: Matt Sherman Sun Aug 28 5:00 PM (PT)
Parallel questions give you an argument and ask you to find the answer that has the same logical structure. Because you have to evaluate six different arguments (the argument presented and each of the five answers), these questions have a reputation for being long and arduous, but most are easily conquered with the right approach.
Parallel Party
Instructor: Laura Damone Mon Aug 29 10:00 AM (PT)
In this session, we'll warm up our brain for Rebuttals by doing some level 4 and 5 Disagree questions in the Inference Family, and then we'll pivot (pun intended) into looking at Rebuttal-style arguments in the argument-based families.
Rebuttals
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Mon Aug 29 5:00 PM (PT)
When logic games get tough, it's often because there are more players than positions, or vice versa. Learn advanced strategies for managing each of the different ways a Non 1:1 game can shake out.
Non 1:1
Instructor: Matt Sherman Tue Aug 30 3:30 PM (PT)
Big Picture Questions such as Main Point, Primary Purpose, and Organization questions reward our ability to mentally map the passage, ID a Framework, and distill the author's biggest ideas.
Big Picture Questions
Instructor: Matt Sherman Tue Aug 30 6:00 PM (PT)
Analogy and Application questions ask you to find an answer choice that applies a principle or exemplifies a relationship. Conquering these tough questions requires targeted research, thoughtful predictions, and strong process of elimination skills.
Analogy/Application
Instructor: Laura Damone Wed Aug 31 10:00 AM (PT)
Science passages are typically considered the most challenging on the LSAT due to the complexity of the subject matter and vocabulary. Most of them have an Old / New framework, and the final paragraph tends to feature the author's assessment / takeaways / implications.
Science (advanced)
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Wed Aug 31 5:00 PM (PT)
Most questions in comparative passage sets require that you understand how the two passages are similar and how they are different. This lesson covers how to adjust your reading process for this type of passage.
Old/New
Instructor: Matt Sherman Thu Sep 1 2:30 PM (PT)
This lesson looks at how the correct answer to a Necessary Assumption question creates a linking or a defending relationship.
Necessary Assumption
Instructor: Matt Sherman Thu Sep 1 6:00 PM (PT)
In Hybrid games, we have to put things in order and into groups. This means adapting your game board to manage multiple tasks at once.
Hybrid
Instructor: Laura Damone Fri Sep 2 10:00 AM (PT)
No class for Labor Day.
Labor Day
Instructor: Matt Sherman Sun Sep 4 2:30 PM (PT)
No class for Labor Day Weekend.
Labor Day
Instructor: Matt Sherman Sun Sep 4 5:00 PM (PT)
No class for Labor Day Weekend.
Labor Day
Instructor: Laura Damone Mon Sep 5 10:00 AM (PT)
No class for Labor Day Weekend.
Labor Day
Instructor: Matt Sherman Mon Sep 5 5:00 PM (PT)
Parallel questions ask you to match reasoning between the logic presented in the question stem and the answer choices. It is a rare but important question type to recognize and tackle.
Parallel
Instructor: Matt Sherman Tue Sep 6 3:30 PM (PT)
In/Out Grouping games are a tricky game type designed to measure if-then reasoning. Properly notating conditional relationships and quickly linking them together is your key to success in this game type.
In/Out Grouping
Instructor: Matt Sherman Tue Sep 6 6:00 PM (PT)
Flaw questions are the most common Logical Reasoning question type. Almost half exibit one of the ten Famous Flaws, while the other half frame their flaws in terms of Assumptions made or Objections overlooked.
Flaw
Instructor: Laura Damone Wed Sep 7 10:00 AM (PT)
This session looks at games that give us the initial impression of, "Say what?" Some aspect of them makes us feel at the start like we might be lost or in over our heads, but if we stay calm and improvise a setup, they usually are more bark than bite.
Outliers
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Wed Sep 7 5:00 PM (PT)
Science passages are typically considered the most challenging on the LSAT due to the complexity of the subject matter and vocabulary.
Comparative Passages
Instructor: Matt Sherman Thu Sep 8 3:30 PM (PT)
Questions about the author's intent are about the purpose of that part of the passage. These questions ask about the purpose of a statement, a paragraph, or the passage as a whole.
Author's Intent
Instructor: Matt Sherman Thu Sep 8 6:00 PM (PT)
Frames are a powerful tool for some games but a total quagmire for others. Learn when and how to deploy this advanced technique.
Frames
Instructor: Laura Damone Fri Sep 9 10:00 AM (PT)
Flaw questions are the most common Logical Reasoning question type. Almost half exhibit one of the ten Famous Flaws, while the other half, frame their flaws in terms of assumptions made or objections overlooked.
Flaw
Instructor: Matt Sherman Sun Sep 11 5:00 PM (PT)
This lesson looks at how the correct answer to a Necessary Assumption question creates a linking or a defending relationship.
Necessary Assumption
Instructor: Laura Damone Mon Sep 12 10:00 AM (PT)
When Causation appears in the Assumption Family, it almost always involves an author speculating a possible Explanation to account for a given Curious Fact. We learn to consider alternate explanations and to evaluate the plausibility of the author's explanation. When it appears in the Inference Family, it usually involves Causal Chains or addressing "the Causal Difference-Maker".
Causation (advanced)
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Mon Sep 12 5:00 PM (PT)
Standard Grouping games ask you to assign a set of elements to one or more of several teams. Learn how to create an effective game board, notate the rules, and create frames for this game type.
Standard Grouping
Instructor: Matt Sherman Tue Sep 13 6:00 PM (PT)
Learn to conquer what are often considered to be the most challenging passages on the LSAT by Parsing dense text, Picturing the physical phenomena described, and Paraphrasing the jargon.
Science
Instructor: Laura Damone Wed Sep 14 10:00 AM (PT)
Some examples of Locate Detail and all examples Five Questions have an undefined target; in other words, the question stem isn't warning us where we should be looking in the passage. This can be a good time for using CTRL + F, if we have that tool. However, when it comes to Undefined Target examples of Opinion and Inference, these are some of the toughest questions in RC and typically the type of question for which students have the lowest accuracy.
Undefined Target
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Wed Sep 14 5:00 PM (PT)
For Opinion questions in Reading Comprehension, you need to keep track of who believes what and to what degree they believe it.
Opinion
Instructor: Matt Sherman Thu Sep 15 6:00 PM (PT)
Most Supported questions are one of the five most common question types. We read facts, not arguments, and derive an answer that is most likely to be true based on those facts.
Most Supported
Instructor: Laura Damone Fri Sep 16 10:00 AM (PT)
Flaw questions are more common than any other type in Logical Reasoning, and nearly half of all answer choices refer to ten Famous Flaws that you need to know.
Famous Flaws
Instructor: Matt Sherman Sun Sep 18 5:00 PM (PT)
Weaken questions rely heavily on causal and comparative reasoning structures. Master these structures to master this important question type.
Weaken
Instructor: Laura Damone Mon Sep 19 10:00 AM (PT)
Knowing how to correctly interpret, diagram, and manipulate conditional logic only impacts about 20% of questions, but it often becomes a make or break skill when it comes to nailing a few difficult questions in the back end of an LR section.
Conditional Logic (advanced)
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Mon Sep 19 5:00 PM (PT)
This class will cover the most common pathways to scoring 170+ on the LSAT and how to know which paths are open to you.
How To Score 170+ On The LSAT
Instructor: Matt Sherman Tue Sep 20 3:30 PM (PT)
Options Grouping games are about determining which combination of characteristics each player has. Finding inferences before starting on the questions is critical to success in these games, and this lesson will show you how to find them.
Options Grouping
Instructor: Matt Sherman Tue Sep 20 6:00 PM (PT)
Law passages tend to be structurally complex, contain numerous perspectives, and are drawn from source materials unfamiliar to most test takers. Learn to conquer these challenging passages and you'll be ready for your 1L reading!
Law
Instructor: Laura Damone Wed Sep 21 10:00 AM (PT)
Two of the more challenging question types in Logic Games are Possible List and List of Possibilities. We'll discuss telling them apart and how to deal with each.
Lists & Possibilities
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Wed Sep 21 5:00 PM (PT)
Must Be True questions have a right answer you can prove. Learn how they rely heavily on conditional logic and comparative reasoning.
Must Be True
Instructor: Matt Sherman Thu Sep 22 3:30 PM (PT)
Inference questions in Reading Comprehension are about what the author says, what the author implies, and what can be indirectly inferred from the author's statements.
Inference
Instructor: Matt Sherman Thu Sep 22 6:00 PM (PT)
When logic games get tough, it's often because there are more players than positions, or vice versa. Learn advanced strategies for managing each of the different ways a Non 1:1 game can shake out.
Non 1:1
Instructor: Laura Damone Fri Sep 23 10:00 AM (PT)
The rules all come together in Tree Ordering games. Connect the rules to build trees that help you see implicit relationships within the game.
Tree Ordering
Instructor: Matt Sherman Sun Sep 25 2:30 PM (PT)
Weaken questions rely heavily on causal and comparative reasoning structures. Master these structures to master this important question type.
Weaken
Instructor: Matt Sherman Sun Sep 25 5:00 PM (PT)
Strengthen questions ask you to make an argument better. Learn to do that by cementing links between the evidence and conclusion, IDing new info that makes the conclusion more likely, and defending against potential objections.
Strengthen
Instructor: Laura Damone Mon Sep 26 10:00 AM (PT)
We'll look at level 4 and 5 examples of Humanities passages, which typically have a Highlight Noteworthy or Challenge Position framework. Harder versions often involve artistic vernacular that is hard for students to understand, work with, or retain.
Humanities (advanced)
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Mon Sep 26 5:00 PM (PT)
Learn to read in the way the LSAT rewards! This lesson covers Active Reading and Passage Mapping strategies to find and retain the big ideas in the passage.
Big Picture Reading
Instructor: Matt Sherman Tue Sep 27 3:30 PM (PT)
In Stacked Ordering games, a good organization reveals hidden inferences that are the key to quickly solving this game type. This lesson looks at how to spot one of these games, how to set one up, and when to use frames.
Stacked Ordering
Instructor: Matt Sherman Tue Sep 27 6:00 PM (PT)
Sometimes RC masquerades as LR and asks us to strengthen or weaken arguments made in the passage. Learn how to target your passage research, make helpful predictions, and analyze answers effectively in this session.
Strengthen/Weaken RC
Instructor: Laura Damone Wed Sep 28 10:00 AM (PT)
A huge subset of LSAT thinking revolves around being able to complete the comparison when two things are meant to be similar cases, or being able to object to comparative arguments by pointing out meaningful differences.
Comparisons (advanced)
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Wed Sep 28 5:00 PM (PT)
Sufficient Assumption questions are a challenging question type that ask us to supply the missing link in an argument.
Sufficient Assumption
Instructor: Matt Sherman Thu Sep 29 3:30 PM (PT)
Get to know the frameworks for RC passages. Practice using early clues to pick a framework and then using that framework to focus yourself on the two or three biggest ideas.
Finding Frameworks
Instructor: Matt Sherman Thu Sep 29 6:00 PM (PT)
This session looks at games that give us the initial impression of, "Say what?" Some aspect of them makes us feel at the start like we might be lost or in over our heads, but if we stay calm and improvise a setup, they usually are more bark than bite.
Oddballs
Instructor: Laura Damone Fri Sep 30 10:00 AM (PT)
Standard Ordering games are the most common game type in Logic Games. Learn how to manage different rule types and where to look for valuable deductions!
Standard Ordering
Instructor: Matt Sherman Sun Oct 2 2:30 PM (PT)
Strengthen questions on the LSAT are common and have a wide range of difficulty. In this lesson, we present the Reasoning Structures to look out for and the Trap Answers you need to know.
Strengthen
Instructor: Matt Sherman Sun Oct 2 5:00 PM (PT)
Paradox questions ask you to resolve an apparent conflict or to explain something strange. Learn to articulate exactly what's so paradoxical, predict the most common resolutions, and avoid the standard traps.
Paradox
Instructor: Laura Damone Mon Oct 3 10:00 AM (PT)
Options Grouping games are about determining which combination of characteristics each player has. Finding inferences before starting on the questions is critical to success in these games, and this lesson will show you how to find them.
Options
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Mon Oct 3 5:00 PM (PT)
Big Picture Questions such as Main Point, Primary Purpose, Organization questions reward our ability to mentally map the passage, ID a Framework, and distill the author's biggest ideas.
Big Picture Questions
Instructor: Matt Sherman Tue Oct 4 3:30 PM (PT)
Stacked Grouping games are about organizing your game board well. Learn how to pick a variable for the base of your game board and make inferences before you answer the questions.
Stacked Grouping
Instructor: Matt Sherman Tue Oct 4 6:00 PM (PT)
Semi-Defined Target questions are challenging because they don't tell us exactly where to look in the passage. In this session, you'll learn how to hunt for the relevant text, how to take an answer-driven approach, and how to decide which of those two strategies to deploy.
Semi-Defined Target
Instructor: Laura Damone Wed Oct 5 10:00 AM (PT)
Some of the hardest and most time-consuming questions in RC can be the ones that go beyond the passage: Analogy, Application, Strengthen/Weaken, and Add to Passage.
Beyond the Passage
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Wed Oct 5 5:00 PM (PT)
Must Be True questions have a right answer you can prove. Learn how they rely heavily on conditional logic and comparative reasoning.
Necessary Assumption
Instructor: Matt Sherman Thu Oct 6 3:30 PM (PT)
In this lesson we look at the organizing framework in RC that centers on a problem and typically ends with a solution.
Problem/Solution
Instructor: Matt Sherman Thu Oct 6 6:00 PM (PT)
Substitution questions present rules to be replaced with answer choices that yield the same result. Learn how to identify similarities and apply the correct substitution.
Substitution
Instructor: Laura Damone Fri Oct 7 10:00 AM (PT)
In/Out Grouping games are a tricky game type designed to measure if-then reasoning. Properly notating conditional relationships and quickly linking them together is your key to success in this game type.
In/Out Grouping
Instructor: Matt Sherman Sun Oct 9 2:30 PM (PT)
Most Supported questions are one of the five most common question types. We read facts, not arguments, and derive an answer that is most likely to be true based on those facts.
Most Supported
Instructor: Matt Sherman Sun Oct 9 6:00 PM (PT)
Review the most important LR concepts for Test Day!
LR Review
Instructor: Laura Damone Mon Oct 10 10:00 AM (PT)
In this session, we'll try to run through level 4 and 5 examples of common LR questions, to help our October students review for their upcoming test.
LR Review
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Mon Oct 10 5:00 PM (PT)
Questions about the author's intent are about the purpose of that part of the passage. These questions ask about the purpose of a statement, a paragraph, or the passage as a whole.
Author's Intent
Instructor: Matt Sherman Tue Oct 11 3:30 PM (PT)
In Hybrid games, we have to put things in order and into groups. This means adapting your game board to manage multiple tasks at once.
Hybrid
Instructor: Matt Sherman Tue Oct 11 6:00 PM (PT)
Undefined Target questions give us zero hints in the question stem about where the right answer will be found. In this session, learn how to distinguish between predictable and unpredictable Undefined Target questions and shape your approach accordingly.
Undefined Target
Instructor: Laura Damone Wed Oct 12 10:00 AM (PT)
In this session, we'll try to run through a lot of different game setups, to help our October students review for their upcoming test.
LG Review
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Wed Oct 12 5:00 PM (PT)
Flaw questions are the most common Logical Reasoning question type. Almost half exhibit one of the ten Famous Flaws, while the other half, frame their flaws in terms of assumptions made or objections overlooked.
Flaw
Instructor: Matt Sherman Thu Oct 13 3:30 PM (PT)
In these passages, the author typically challenges an explanation, solution, assertion, or assumptions in the opposing point.
Challenge A Position
Instructor: Matt Sherman Thu Oct 13 6:00 PM (PT)
A final review of the most important LG concepts before the October test.
LG Review
Instructor: Laura Damone Fri Oct 14 10:00 AM (PT)
Standard Grouping games ask you to assign a set of elements to one or more of several teams. Learn how to create an effective game board, notate the rules, and create frames for this game type.
Standard Grouping
Instructor: Matt Sherman Sun Oct 16 2:30 PM (PT)
Agree/Disagree questions in Logical Reasoning ask you to identify the answer that both speakers address. This lesson covers important differences in the task set forth in the question stem and the common trap answers to look out for.
Agree/Disagree
Instructor: Matt Sherman Sun Oct 16 5:00 PM (PT)
We'll look at what twists can be added to our beloved Standard Ordering and Tree Ordering, to elevate them into the world of level 4 and 5.
Standard/Tree Ordering (advanced)
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Mon Oct 17 5:00 PM (PT)
Dissecting an argument is a foundational Logical Reasoning skill. Learn about premises, conclusions, opposing points, and more, then put that knowledge to the test with questions that drill this skill.
Dissecting Arguments
Instructor: Laura Damone Tue Oct 18 10:00 AM (PT)
For Opinion questions in Reading Comprehension, you need to keep track of who believes what and to what degree they believe it.
Opinion
Instructor: Matt Sherman Tue Oct 18 3:30 PM (PT)
When logic games get tough, it's often because there are more players than positions, or vice versa. Learn advanced strategies for managing each of the different ways a Non 1:1 game can shake out.
Non 1:1
Instructor: Matt Sherman Tue Oct 18 6:00 PM (PT)
Must Be True questions have a right answer you can prove. And Must Be False questions have a correct answer you can contradict. Learn how these two very literal, very black-and-white question types rely heavily on conditional logic and mathematical reasoning.
Must Be True/False (Advanced)
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Wed Oct 19 5:00 PM (PT)
Learn to read in the way the LSAT rewards! This lesson covers Active Reading and Passage Mapping strategies to find and retain the big ideas in the passage.
Big Picture Reading
Instructor: Laura Damone Thu Oct 20 10:00 AM (PT)
Weaken questions rely heavily on causal and comparative reasoning structures. Master these structures to master this important question type.
Weaken
Instructor: Matt Sherman Thu Oct 20 3:30 PM (PT)
This type of organizing framework is useful for passages with "opponents" and "proponents" or any other time we need to compartmentalize different views on the same subject. Sometimes the author will provide their own point of view; other times they will stay neutral.
Present A Debate
Instructor: Matt Sherman Thu Oct 20 6:00 PM (PT)
Options Grouping games are about determining which combination of characteristics each player has. Finding inferences before starting on the questions is critical to success in these games, and this lesson will show you how to find them.
Options Grouping
Instructor: Matt Sherman Sun Oct 23 2:30 PM (PT)
Method questions ask you to describe the reasoning in the argument. The problem with these questions is the abstract language that can be difficult to process.
Method
Instructor: Matt Sherman Sun Oct 23 5:00 PM (PT)
We'll practice the skills of picking a framework and reading a passage through its lens, determining our 1 to 3 Most Valuable Sentences, and expediting the path to the correct answer by having a strong sense of our "must-haves".
Big Picture Questions (Advanced)
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Mon Oct 24 5:00 PM (PT)
The rules all come together in Tree Ordering games. Connect the rules to build trees that help you see implicit relationships within the game.
Tree Ordering
Instructor: Laura Damone Tue Oct 25 10:00 AM (PT)
Inference questions in Reading Comprehension are about what the author says, what the author implies, and what can be indirectly inferred from the author's statements.
Inference
Instructor: Matt Sherman Tue Oct 25 3:30 PM (PT)
Substitution questions present rules to be replaced with answer choices that yield the same result. Learn how to identify similarities and apply the correct substitution.
Substitution
Instructor: Matt Sherman Tue Oct 25 6:00 PM (PT)
This is the 2nd most common type of game; we'll discuss its signature rules, its potential (or lack thereof) for Frames, and the most important questions to ask ourselves during the setup, while working on level 3-5 examples.
Standard Grouping (Advanced)
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Wed Oct 26 5:00 PM (PT)
2-Speaker questions can spell double trouble, but not once you're adept at determining which part of Speaker 1's argument Speaker 2 is addressing.
2 Speakers
Instructor: Laura Damone Thu Oct 27 10:00 AM (PT)
Strengthen questions on the LSAT are common and have a wide range of difficulty. In this lesson, we present the Reasoning Structures to look out for and the Trap Answers you need to know.
Strengthen
Instructor: Matt Sherman Thu Oct 27 3:30 PM (PT)
These passages have a very straightforward, descriptive feel, making it harder sometimes to figure out which of the many details we hear about should count as the Main Point.
Highlight Noteworthy
Instructor: Matt Sherman Thu Oct 27 6:00 PM (PT)
In Stacked Ordering games, a good organization reveals hidden inferences that are the key to quickly solving this game type. This lesson looks at how to spot one of these games, how to set one up, and when to use frames.
Stacked Ordering
Instructor: Matt Sherman Sun Oct 30 2:30 PM (PT)
Parallel questions ask you to match reasoning between the logic presented in the question stem and the answer choices. It is a rare but important question type to recognize and tackle.
Parallel
Instructor: Matt Sherman Sun Oct 30 5:00 PM (PT)
Weaken (advanced)
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Mon Oct 31 5:00 PM (PT)
Get to know the top five frameworks for RC passages. Practice using early clues to pick a framework and then using that framework to focus yourself on the two or three biggest ideas.
Finding Frameworks
Instructor: Laura Damone Tue Nov 1 10:00 AM (PT)
Locate Detail questions ask for something the passage explicitly stated. Make your hunt through the passage efficient by using the question's Target to tailor your approach.
Locate Detail
Instructor: Matt Sherman Tue Nov 1 3:30 PM (PT)
Reassignment games give you the initial assignment of players to positions in the logic game. The rules provide several ways to reassign those players to the positions and ask you to keep track of several iterations of reassignment.
Reassignment
Instructor: Matt Sherman Tue Nov 1 6:00 PM (PT)
We'll work on difficult examples of Paragraph Purpose, Local Purpose, and Meaning in Context, where we're asked what the author was intending with a given paragraph, sentence, or word/phrase.
Author's Intent (advanced)
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Wed Nov 2 5:00 PM (PT)
Standard Ordering games are the most common game type in Logic Games. Learn how to manage different rule types and where to look for valuable deductions!
Standard Ordering
Instructor: Laura Damone Thu Nov 3 10:00 AM (PT)
Most Supported questions are one of the five most common question types. We read facts, not arguments, and derive an answer that is most likely to be true based on those facts.
Most Supported
Instructor: Matt Sherman Thu Nov 3 3:30 PM (PT)
Most questions in comparative passage sets require that you understand how the two passages are similar and how they are different. This lesson covers how to adjust your reading process for this type of passage.
Comparative Passages
Instructor: Matt Sherman Thu Nov 3 6:00 PM (PT)
Stacked Grouping games are about organizing your game board well. Learn how to pick a variable for the base of your game board and make inferences before you answer the questions.
Stacked Grouping
Instructor: Matt Sherman Sun Nov 6 2:30 PM (PT)
We'll look at how conditional logic rears its head in difficult examples of Must Be True, Sufficient Assumption, Principle, and Parallel questions.
Conditional Logic
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Mon Nov 7 5:00 PM (PT)
Learn how to diagram and manipulate conditional statements and you'll conquer this reasoning type that is the backbone of the LSAT.
Conditional Diagramming
Instructor: Laura Damone Tue Nov 8 10:00 AM (PT)
Get to know the top five frameworks for RC passages. Practice using early clues to pick a framework and then using that framework to focus yourself on the two or three biggest ideas.
Find A Framework
Instructor: Matt Sherman Tue Nov 8 3:30 PM (PT)
Stacked Ordering is the 3rd most common type of game. We'll discuss the three typical reasons we would start using a stacked diagram, and look at difficult Level 3-5 examples of this game type.
Stacked Ordering (advanced)
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Wed Nov 9 5:00 PM (PT)
Big Picture Questions such as Main Point, Primary Purpose, Organization questions reward our ability to mentally map the passage, ID a Framework, and distill the author's biggest ideas.
Big Picture Questions
Instructor: Laura Damone Thu Nov 10 10:00 AM (PT)
Agree/Disagree questions in Logical Reasoning ask you to identify the answer that both speakers address. This lesson covers important differences in the task set forth in the question stem and the common trap answers to look out for.
Agree/Disagree
Instructor: Matt Sherman Thu Nov 10 3:30 PM (PT)
In Hybrid games, we have to put things in order and into groups. This means adapting your game board to manage multiple tasks at once.
Hybrid
Instructor: Matt Sherman Sun Nov 13 2:30 PM (PT)
Locate Detail questions ask for something the passage explicitly stated. Make your hunt through the passage efficient by using the question's Target to tailor your approach.
Locate Detail (Advanced)
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Mon Nov 14 5:00 PM (PT)
In/Out Grouping games test our conditional reasoning skills. This lesson focuses on how to note and chain conditional rules, and how to use Placeholder inferences to drive your gameplay.
In/Out Grouping
Instructor: Laura Damone Tue Nov 15 10:00 AM (PT)
These passages have a very straightforward, descriptive feel, making it harder sometimes to figure out which of the many details we hear about should count as the Main Point.
Highlight Noteworthy
Instructor: Matt Sherman Tue Nov 15 3:30 PM (PT)
Flaw is the most common question type in LR. It combines skills from Necessary Assumption, Weaken, and Method. Most questions are testing an objection unique to that argument, but about half of the answer choice refer to the same 10 abstract flaws.
Flaw (Advanced)
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Wed Nov 16 5:00 PM (PT)
Parallel questions give you an argument and ask you to find the answer that has the same logical structure. Because you have to evaluate six different arguments (the argument presented and each of the five answers), these questions have a reputation for being long and arduous, but most are easily conquered with the right approach.
Parallel Party
Instructor: Laura Damone Thu Nov 17 10:00 AM (PT)
Main Conclusion questions are a good place to test your ability to find the conclusion of an argument. It’s the first step in most Logical Reasoning questions, so be sure to learn these strategies to find the argument's main conclusion.
Main Conclusion
Instructor: Matt Sherman Thu Nov 17 3:30 PM (PT)
When logic games get tough, it's often because there are more players than positions, or vice versa. Learn advanced strategies for managing each of the different ways a Non 1:1 game can shake out.
Non 1:1
Instructor: Matt Sherman Sun Nov 20 2:30 PM (PT)
In Hybrid games, we have to put things in order and into groups. This means adapting your game board to manage multiple tasks at once.
Hybrid (advanced)
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Mon Nov 21 5:00 PM (PT)
Questions about the author's intent are about the purpose of that part of the passage. These questions will typically ask about the purpose of a statement, of a paragraph, or of the passage as a whole.
Author's Intent
Instructor: Laura Damone Tue Nov 22 10:00 AM (PT)
This type of organizing framework is useful for passages with "opponents" and "proponents" or any other time we need to compartmentalize different views on the same subject. Sometimes the author will provide their own point of view; other times they will stay neutral.
Present A Debate
Instructor: Matt Sherman Tue Nov 22 3:30 PM (PT)
No class for the Thanksgiving holiday.
Thanksgiving - NO CLASS
Instructor: Laura Damone Thu Nov 24 10:00 AM (PT)
No class for the Thanksgiving holiday.
Thanksgiving - NO CLASS
Instructor: Matt Sherman Thu Nov 24 3:30 PM (PT)
Role questions ask you to describe the role of a claim in an argument. Learn about premises, conclusions, opposing points, and more.
Role
Instructor: Matt Sherman Sun Nov 27 2:30 PM (PT)
This session will look at level 3-5 examples of questions that require us to deconstruct arguments into their conclusion(s) and premise(s), while characterizing the type of evidence and reasoning moves used to arrive at the conclusion. This means working on Main Conclusion, Role, Method, and Parallel questions.
Dissecting Arguments (Advanced)
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Mon Nov 28 5:00 PM (PT)
In Stacked Ordering Games, one row tracks the players on the number line while another tracks some other detail or player for each spot. Learn to use Rosters to keep important info front and center and make game changing inferences.
Stacked Ordering
Instructor: Laura Damone Tue Nov 29 10:00 AM (PT)
Substitution questions present rules to be replaced with answer choices that yield the same result. Learn how to identify similarities and apply the correct substitution.
Substitution
Instructor: Matt Sherman Tue Nov 29 3:30 PM (PT)
These questions test our understanding of the author's stance, her main ideas as well as her caveats and concessions. However, they tend to be harder for students than are Big Picture questions.
Opinion & Attitude (Advanced)
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Wed Nov 30 5:00 PM (PT)
Sufficient Assumption questions are a challenging question type that ask us to supply the missing link in an argument.
Sufficient Assumption
Instructor: Laura Damone Thu Dec 1 10:00 AM (PT)
In this lesson we look at the organizing framework in RC that centers on a problem and typically ends with a solution.
Problem/Solution
Instructor: Matt Sherman Thu Dec 1 3:30 PM (PT)
Method questions ask you to describe the reasoning in the argument. The problem with these questions is the abstract language that can be difficult to process.
Method
Instructor: Matt Sherman Sun Dec 4 2:30 PM (PT)
We'll work on difficult examples of Sufficient Assumption and Necessary Assumption, shifting from a conditional logic mindset with the former to a more flexible "Link or Defender?" mindset for the latter.
Assumptions (Advanced)
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Mon Dec 5 5:00 PM (PT)
Locate Detail questions ask for something the passage explicitly stated. Make your hunt through the passage efficient by using the question's Target to tailor your approach.
Locate Details
Instructor: Laura Damone Tue Dec 6 10:00 AM (PT)
Reassignment games give you the initial assignment of players to positions in the logic game. The rules provide several ways to reassign those players to the positions and ask you to keep track of several iterations of reassignment.
Reassignment
Instructor: Matt Sherman Tue Dec 6 3:30 PM (PT)
Frames are a powerful tool for some games but a total quagmire for others. We'll work on when and how to deploy this advanced technique.
Frames
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Wed Dec 7 5:00 PM (PT)
Stacked Grouping games are about organizing your game board well. Learn how to pick a variable for the base of your game board and make inferences before you answer the questions.
Standard Grouping
Instructor: Laura Damone Thu Dec 8 10:00 AM (PT)
Most questions in comparative passage sets require that you understand how the two passages are similar and how they are different. This lesson covers how to adjust your reading process for this type of passage.
Comparative Passages
Instructor: Matt Sherman Thu Dec 8 3:30 PM (PT)
Parallel questions take more effort to complete than other questions. Consider structure and validity and they won't necessarily be harder.
Parallel
Instructor: Matt Sherman Sun Dec 11 2:30 PM (PT)
Comparisons (Advanced)
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Mon Dec 12 5:00 PM (PT)
Principle questions come in two main flavors. Learn how to support an argument with a general rule, and how to spot an argument that conforms to a given rule.
Principles
Instructor: Laura Damone Tue Dec 13 10:00 AM (PT)
Frames are a powerful tool for some games but a total quagmire for others. Learn when and how to deploy this advanced technique.
Frames
Instructor: Matt Sherman Tue Dec 13 3:30 PM (PT)
Some of the hardest and most time-consuming questions in RC can be the ones that go beyond the passage: Analogy, Application, Strengthen/Weaken, and Add to Passage.
Beyond the Passage (Advanced)
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Wed Dec 14 5:00 PM (PT)
In Hybrid games, we have to put things in order and into groups. This means adapting your game board to manage multiple tasks at once.
Hybrid
Instructor: Laura Damone Thu Dec 15 10:00 AM (PT)
Learn to conquer what are often considered to be the most challenging passages on the LSAT by Parsing dense text, Picturing the physical phenomena described, and Paraphrasing the jargon.
Science
Instructor: Matt Sherman Thu Dec 15 3:30 PM (PT)
Substitution questions are a quantum-shift up in difficulty from other LG questions. In order to see whether an answer choice creates the exact same game as the rule-being-substituted, we have to make sure that everything that used to be allowed is still allowed, and everything that was forbidden is still forbidden.
Substitution (advanced)
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Mon Dec 19 5:00 PM (PT)
Must Be True questions rely heavily on conditional logic, comparisons and mathy quantifier reasoning. Learn to harnass the power of diagramming to tackle these tricky questions!
Must Be True
Instructor: Laura Damone Tue Dec 20 10:00 AM (PT)
Parallel questions give you an argument and ask you to find the answer that has the same logical structure. Because you have to evaluate six different arguments (the argument presented and each of the five answers), these questions have a reputation for being long and arduous, but most are easily conquered with the right approach.
Parallel Party
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Wed Dec 21 5:00 PM (PT)
Inference questions in Reading Comprehension are about what the author says, what the author implies, and what can be indirectly inferred from the author's statements.
Inference
Instructor: Laura Damone Thu Dec 22 10:00 AM (PT)
These passages have a very straightforward, descriptive feel, making it harder sometimes to figure out which of the many details we hear about should count as the Main Point.
Highlight Noteworthy (Advanced)
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Wed Dec 28 5:00 PM (PT)
Flaw questions are the most common Logical Reasoning question type. Almost half exhibit one of the ten Famous Flaws, while the other half, frame their flaws in terms of assumptions made or objections overlooked.
Flaw
Instructor: Laura Damone Tue Jan 3 10:00 AM (PT)
Authors in the Assumption / Objection family frequently present a Curious Fact and then conclude/assume some Causal Explanation for that idea, leading us to ponder the plausibility of that explanation and the possibility of other explanations. Inference questions often test us on Causal Chains or Causal Difference-Makers.
Causation (Advanced)
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Wed Jan 4 5:00 PM (PT)
Frames are a powerful tool for some games but a total quagmire for others. Learn when and how to deploy this advanced technique.
Frames
Instructor: Laura Damone Thu Jan 5 10:00 AM (PT)
A final review of the most important LG concepts before the upcoming test.
LG Review
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Mon Jan 9 5:00 PM (PT)
This lesson covers Reasoning Structures and Trap Answers common to Necessary Assumption questions and looks at how the correct answer creates a linking or a defending relationship.
Necessary Assumption
Instructor: Laura Damone Tue Jan 10 10:00 AM (PT)
LR Review
Instructor: Patrick Tyrrell Wed Jan 11 5:00 PM (PT)
Learn to conquer what are often considered to be the most challenging passages on the LSAT by Parsing dense text, Picturing the physical phenomena described, and Paraphrasing the jargon.
Science
Instructor: Laura Damone Thu Jan 12 10:00 AM (PT)
Weaken questions rely heavily on causal and comparative reasoning structures. Master these structures to master this important question type.
Weaken
Instructor: Laura Damone Tue Jan 17 10:00 AM (PT)
When logic games get tough, it's often because there are more players than positions, or vice versa. Learn advanced strategies for managing each of the different ways a Non 1:1 game can shake out.
Non 1:1
Instructor: Laura Damone Thu Jan 19 10:00 AM (PT)
Some of the hardest and most time-consuming questions in RC can be the ones that go beyond the passage: Analogy, Application, Strengthen/Weaken, Last Sentence, and Title/Audience.
RC Beyond
Instructor: Laura Damone Tue Jan 24 10:00 AM (PT)
Strengthen questions ask you to make an argument better. Learn to do that by cementing links between the evidence and conclusion, IDing new info that makes the conclusion more likely, and defending against potential objections.
Strengthen
Instructor: Laura Damone Tue Jan 24 10:00 AM (PT)
Paradox questions ask you to resolve an apparent conflict or to explain something strange. Learn to articulate exactly what's so paradoxical, predict the most common resolutions, and avoid the standard traps.
Paradox
Instructor: Laura Damone Tue Jan 31 10:00 AM (PT)
This session looks at games that give us the initial impression of, "Say what?" Some aspect of them makes us feel at the start like we might be lost or in over our heads, but if we stay calm and improvise a setup, they usually are more bark than bite.
Oddballs
Instructor: Laura Damone Thu Feb 2 10:00 AM (PT)
Most Supported questions are one of the five most common question types. We read facts, not arguments, and derive an answer that is most likely to be true based on those facts.
Most Supported
Instructor: Laura Damone Tue Feb 7 10:00 AM (PT)
Substitution questions present rules to be replaced with answer choices that yield the same result. Learn how to identify similarities and apply the correct substitution.
Substitution
Instructor: Laura Damone Thu Feb 9 10:00 AM (PT)
Instructor:
Take This Class
Create Your Free Account
Register for your trial class by creating an account
Education
LSAT Score
BIO
Instructor:
Take This Class
Cookies and other technologies are used on this site to offer users the best experience of relevant content, information and advertising.