Kurzbeschreibung
The Princeton Review doesn't try to teach you everything there is to know about reading comprehension or analytic thinking. They just tell you what you need to know to score higher on the LSAT.
There's a big difference. In
Cracking the LSAT, The Princeton Review will teach you how to think like the test makers.
This is accomplished by teaching you how to:
Eliminate answer choices that look right but are planted to fool you
Crack complex argument problems by zeroing in on the conclusion
Use powerful methods of diagramming to solve games problems
Ace the reading comprehension section by "mapping out" the passages
Improve your writing sample by knowing what they're really looking for
*This book and CD-ROM package includes 6 full-length simulated LSAT exams: 2 in the book and 4 on CD-ROM. Plus, it will show you how to go online and take an additional exam with instant analysis. The questions in these tests are exactly like the ones you'll see on the actual LSAT, and every solution is fully explained.
Contents include:General Information and StrategiesArgumentsGamesReading ComprehensionThe Writing SamplePutting It All TogetherLaw School Admissions
Über den Autor
Adam Robinson graduated from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania before earning a law degree at Oxford University in England. A rated chess master, he devised the now famous "Joe Bloggs" approach to beating standardized tests, as well as numerous other core Princeton review techniques. He is also a freelance author of many books, and has collaborated with The Princeton Review to develop a number of its courses.
Rob Tallia has been a teacher and trainer with the Princeton Review since 1990. Most recently he was the Research and Development Director for the LSAT Program. He has published fiction, magazine articles and, in 1997, contributed three chapters to The Princeton Review's
Best Law Schools.