In part two of this difficult game from the June 2009 LSAT, Blueprint LSAT Prep co-founder Matt Riley continues his instruction on the mauve dinosaur game. In this segment, Matt covers the big ded...
In part two of this difficult game from the June 2009 LSAT, Blueprint LSAT Prep co-founder Matt Riley continues his instruction on the mauve dinosaur game. In this segment, Matt covers the big deduction that cracks open the whole game. Hell show you how to arrive at the deduction by teaching another skill LSAT games often require: indirect deduction.
Indirect deduction occurs when you catalogue the information a rule gives you as well as what it means for other variables in the game. For instance, if a rule states that only one car is green, we know that the car is green but we also know that no other car is green. The concept of indirect rule deduction must be applied in the June 2009 mauve dinosaur game or it cannot be mastered.
If you are practicing for your own LSAT, this is an important video to watch, as this concept shows up frequently on the logic games sections of the LSAT. Dont forget to check out other Blueprint LSAT videos, our web site, and the LSAT blog Most Strongly Supported for additional free LSAT help, as well as free information on applying to law schools. www.blueprintprep.com www.moststronglysupported.com
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thx for your hard work in explaining this.. it was very clear.....when you explained it... just hope i can remember how to do this for the lsat.. thx :)
Autoshare makes certain YouTube activities public on the services you choose. Select only the services you are comfortable with - like Facebook, Twitter, or Google Reader - to let your friends know what you like on YouTube. You can turn Autoshare off at any time.
it was very clear.....when you explained it...
just hope i can remember how to do this for the lsat..
thx :)