Merry Christmas, everyone!
Small-Scale Question Sunday for December 25, 2022
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Notes -
I would be very interested in this as well. The one thing I’ve heard is that you should be careful about changing MCQ answers of questions you’re not entirely sure about (and that isn’t down to simply working it out with the information given, like in a mathematics test), because there’s often some association below the level of conscious thought that’s pushing you to the initial answer.
It tended to be the MCQs that I finished in half the time most other people did; my pen grip is poor, so essay-questions tended to be agony as my hand starts to cramp half an hour to one hour in. I also tend to find more things to write when I get more time, is that not the same for you?
Edit:a word
I don't like the conscious/subconscious distinction, but aside from that, you almost always can do extra work to either check an answer or rederive it in a different way, and changing answers based on that will improve your score. I always caught a few mistakes going back over problems.
I don’t really disagree, especially if you’re able to get more information. I think it’s more for knowledge questions that you have no solid clue on, go “I feel it’s C somehow”, then start doubting yourself afterwards for no solid reason.
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I've argued this so many times with my wife about aesthetic choices. When we pick paint colors for the house, I stare at the rack at home depot until I pick a color, then we stick with it. I also forbid changing outfits after one has gotten dressed, they always get worse not better. There's something below the surface that will make the perfect choice obvious! You make one decision and then stick with it and never think about it again. Given, that's also how I got married to start with.
But it seems like that wouldn't apply as much to the LSAT.
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