October 2003 Lsat Logic Games

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With the October LSAT just around the corner, you should be in the refining stages for each of the three question types. This includes Logic Games, which – as perhaps the most learnable section – is a great place to invest some fine-tuning. Once you’ve mastered the fundamentals, one great way to get prepared for LG is to challenge yourself with some of the hardest Games known to mankind. Additionally, practicing on these Games will familiarize you with the identifying characteristics of uniquely challenging games, enabling you to pick them out of the lineup on test day. Perhaps the most infamous Logic Game of the modern era is the Dinosaur Game (June 2009, Game #3). This game selects five dinos from seven, mixing it up a little with various colors (including a particular color called “mauve,” the mention of which cost your correspondent three and a half minutes of bemusement).

The questions are more or less impossible unless you find several key deductions, and the deductions themselves aren’t exactly obvious – but of course, that’s what makes it such a great game to practice on. Another doozie is the Zephyr Airline Game (June 2003, Game #3), which is about flight connections between five cities. The natural inclination is to draw a map, which can be helpful, but many draw a big gooberish glob that makes things more confusing. This one is particularly tricky because it’s a type of game that we don’t see too often, so just building a set-up sometimes throws students for a loop. Games of this level of difficulty aren’t too common, but there are a few others worth trying: December 2010, Game #2 (stained glass windows) December 2000, Game #3 (rubies, sapphires, and topazes) June 2000, Game #2 (CDs for sale) December 1998, Game #2 (lizards and snakes) Any others that you think should make the list? Any particular game giving you some trouble? Comment below!

Logic Games Basics Here are some key things to know about the Logic Games section: • Exactly one of your four scored sections will be a Logic Games section. • Each Logic Games section has four games, and generally twenty-three total questions. Download firmware e5372s bolton. • Each game will have between five and seven questions associated with it. • Every game that has appeared on the LSAT over the past decade can be thought of in terms of elements to be assigned, and positions to be filled. • For two or three games in every four-game set, the positions are organized in some sort of order. • For approximately half of all Logic Games, the positions are organized in groups. • Some games have positions organized by group and order.

Jump to PrepTest 41 (October 2003) Logic Games Solutions - complete Logic Games solutions for PrepTest 41 (October 2003). Please note: the.

Almost no games have positions organized by neither group nor order. • Games are further complicated due to subgroups, or mismatching numbers issues. • For almost all test takers, a diagram is necessary for organizing the information given, and the ability to diagram well is a big key to success. • The purpose of a diagram is to represent what you know about a game in a clear and usable way, and to help facilitate bringing information together.

• Of the twenty-three questions, all but two to four of them will come from a small bucket of basic, consistent, and predictable question types. • The remaining few will also come from an equally small bucket of minor question types.

• All questions test your ability to differentiate between what we can know about a situation, and what remains uncertain. A minority of questions also test your ability to consider a range of possibilities.

Scenario A cruise line is scheduling seven week-long voyages for the ship Freedom. Each voyage will occur in exactly one of the first seven weeks of the season: weeks 1 through 7.

Each voyage will be to exactly one of four destinations: Guadeloupe, Jamaica, Martinique, or Trinidad. Each destination will be scheduled for at least one of the weeks. The following conditions apply to Freedom’s schedule: • Jamaica will not be its destination in week 4.

• Trinidad will be its destination in week 7. • Freedom will make exactly two voyages to Martinique, and at least one voyage to • Guadeloupe will occur in some week between those two voyages. • Guadeloupe will be its destination in the week preceding any voyage it makes to Jamaica. • No destination will be scheduled for consecutive weeks.

If Freedom makes a voyage to Trinidad in week 5, which one of the following could be true? (A) Freedom makes a voyage to Trinidad in week 1. (B) Freedom makes a voyage to Martinique in week 2. (C) Freedom makes a voyage to Guadeloupe in week 3.