Building the Best LSAT Teacher
Posted by noah@atlaslsat.com in Atlas Announcements on March 8th, 2010
I wrote a while back about our selection process http://www.atlaslsat.com/blog/index.php/2009/11/16/what-makes-for-a-good-lsat-teacher/ but an article in the Sunday NY Times Magazine made me think some more about what makes for great LSAT teaching: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/07/magazine/07Teachers-t.html?ref=magazine
Doug Lemov, the main subject of the article, went around and videotaped teachers to create a catalog of effective teaching moves. He actually filmed me when I used to teach 5th and 6th grade math at North Star Academy in Newark (if I recall, it’s a clip of me telling a kid to sit down — over and over again). I truly admire Doug’s work — it provides a way to look at and work on some of the tangible ingredients that make a teacher great, and thus, students learn. At times, I find the focus on moves a bit too narrow, but as the article suggests, the moves are just part of the package — a teacher needs to know the content backwards and forwards, and have a great curriculum.
It turns out that a lot of the moves that are effective in a middle school math classroom are the same ones that make an LSAT classroom work. Not that we need to tell students to sit down (or at least not over and over again), but keeping every student engaged is part of an Atlas LSAT teacher’s job. Sure, people who sign up for an LSAT class are self-motivated, but if they’re bored they’re bored! So, cold-calling (read the article) is needed for adults too! Be ready, the next question may be yours….
Negating Assumptions on the LSAT - Answers
Posted by AileenNielsen in LSAT content on February 22nd, 2010
Alright, here are the answers to the last blog post: Negating Assumptions on the LSAT
Non Exhaustive List of Common Terms and Negations
If you see… Negate with…
All Not all
Some None/no
Most Not most/less than half
Not all All
None At least one/Some
Probably Probably not/Unlikely
Unlikely Likely
Never At least once/Sometimes
Always Not always
Sometimes Never
Without With
With Without
Can you think of others that should be on this list?
Negating Assumptions on the LSAT
Posted by AileenNielsen in LSAT Prep, LSAT content on February 12th, 2010
1
Learning to negate answer choices on the LSAT is a key skill if you are really looking to push up your score, for lots of reasons. I tend to think there are two especially important ones. First, assumption questions (and one of the most-related question type, flaw questions) are quite common, and many students find it’s difficult to get all of the most challenging assumption questions correct without using the negation test. Second, negation can be useful for thinking out counterfactuals on inference and strengthen/weaken questions – more on this another time. Today, I’ll be writing about how to negate in general terms. In another blog post, I’ll get into specifics.
An important thing to keep in mind before jumping into this is that negation is not something you should plan to use all the time, even on assumption questions. Use negation to choose between two answer choices if they both seem like close contenders. Your first line of offense for assumption questions should continue to be based on issues of scope and spotting the logical gaps in an argument.
The Basics
You might be wondering what is so difficult about negation, and if you are, I would guess you have not gotten too far into your preparation yet. Often, working with students one-on-one or in a classroom I notice numerous mistakes when students try to negate, and often they don’t even realize they’ve made huge logical changes to the answer choice in the process of negating it. For this reason, I think it’s appropriate to start with a general example that shows in broad, simple terms the mistakes we sometimes make when we negate. Consider,
(1) The cat jumped over the mat.
That would probably be straightforward to negate, right? We could just negate the verb:
The cat did not jump over the mat.
That’s all well and good, but what about this sentence?
(2) A cat jumped over the mat.
Does that get negated the same way? Of course it doesn’t. I’ll talk about why in a second, but more interestingly, I wanted to point out that there are two ways to negate statement (2).
A cat did not jump over the mat
or
No cat jumped over the mat.
Though these two are phrased differently, they actually mean the same thing. Effectively both say that the mat has never seen a cat jumping over it (or should I say that the mat has never been jumped by a cat :) ?)
Let’s consider one of these negations:
No cat jumped over the mat
Why can’t I use it to negate statement (1)?
Changing “the” to “no” misreads the meaning of the original in a way that does not simply negate the sentence. Since I used “the” in the original case (1), I was really only writing about a specific cat. I should have only cared about whether that cat had jumped over the mat. If all I wanted to say was that the specific cat did not jump over the mat, I did not need to prove the broad statement above, that no cat, ever, has jumped over that mat. Essentially, trying to negate in the second version I over-negated, a potentially fatal mistake in LSAT practice and law alike. I never want to do more heavy lifting (read negating) than I absolutely must.
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Philosophy
The most important question you should ask yourself when confused about how to negate a particular answer choice is, “What is the minimum I would need to show that disprove the statement above?” This minimum part is very important because often, in difficult cases, students over-negate because they are not paring down to the very minimum.
To see an example of these, consider the following. Imagine your classmate says to you, “I don’t have any friends in this class.” You’d probably respond to this by saying “That’s not true – everyone (or almost everyone here) is your friend.” But that’s a lot more than you’d have to say, and maybe a lot more than you’d want to say, if this classmate was going to ask you to prove your statement. A better idea would be to say more simply, “That’s not true – I’m your friend.” This might sound less promising, but it’s easier to prove, and, importantly, it’s enough to disprove your friend’s statement.
Let’s formalize this a little bit.
(3) No one in this class is my friend.
What do we need to negate here? Well, if we go back to our anecdotal version above, we see that all we need to show to disprove this (and consequently the negation of case (3)) is that
At least one person in this class is my friend.
That is the negation because it would make statement (3) untrue, though it might not comfort the speaker much to have one friend rather than none, but we are concerned with the logical statements above. Now, to give a few versions I might have anticipated a student giving mistakenly, consider each of these:
Everyone in this class is my friend.
No one in this class is not my friend.
I have a lot of friends.
Everyone is my friend.
All of these “overshoot.” Overshooting is bad. Bad on the LSAT because it shows an inability to determine the precise logical negation of a statement, and bad as a lawyer because you make your case more difficult for yourself than you really have to. From here onwards, make parsimony a central feature of your negation process. Also,make sure you can articulate how each one overshoots before you continue reading.
3
Complicated Sentences with Multiple Things you Kind of Want to Negate
Now let’s consider the real thing. Consider this answer choice from an assumption question.
(4) Most people who suffer from ordinary mountain sickness recover without any special treatment.
The tricky part about negating this answer choice is that there are many parts of the sentence we could negate. To make it more obvious, I’ve broken it down by idea:
Most people who | suffer from ordinary mountain sickness | recover |without any special treatment.
Let’s break this down by negating each of these in turn and thinking about whether it produces the minimum that, if true, would disprove the original statement (4).
First, let’s negate the first chunk of the sentence, “Most people who.” This is a claim that at least 50% of a group of people do a specific thing. To negate this part, I’d say “less than half of those people”, or “not most.” This sounds a bit awkward, but it conveys the meaning:
#1 Less than half the people who suffer from ordinary mountain sickness recover without any special treatment.
Would this disprove statement (4) if true? It seems it would because it would show that not more than 50% of the group actually gets better without special treatment. This also seems pretty minimal. For example, so long as I could show that fewer than 49% of people got better this way, I would be set.
Let’s look at negating the second part.
#2 Most people who do not suffer from ordinary mountain sickness recover without any special treatment.
If true, would this disprove the original statement (4)? No, absolutely not. If you’ve been studying for the LSAT for some time, you’ll certainly recognize that this has a scope problem. We don’t actually care about people who don’t have ordinary mountain sickness – we care about people who do have the illness. This is definitely not the proper way to negate the statement.
If we negate the third part of the sentence, we have
#3 Most people who suffer from ordinary mountain sickness do not recover without any special treatment.
Like the first version of a negation, this seems as though it would disprove the statement. Here it would do so by talking about the same group of people (most of those who get this illness), but saying that they do not do what the speaker claims they do. Is this minimal? It seems like it, but let’s push on.
Negating the fourth portion of the sentence yields,
#4 Most people who suffer from ordinary mountain sickness recover with special treatment
This one sounds kind of funny, doesn’t it? We know what it means though, so maybe we can rephrase it a bit better as
Most people who suffer from ordinary mountain sickness recover after receiving special treatment
Oh! Now this actually looks a lot like # 3, which in turn looks a lot like #1. Indeed, if we really think about what they mean, they all mean the same thing, which is saying that more than half of people received some kind of special treatment before they get better, which is the opposite of what the answer choice says.
Moreover, it answers our requirement of parsimony too. We don’t need to show that no one can get better without special treatment – all we need to show is that such is not the case.
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Non Exhausted List of Terms and Their Negations
Now that we’ve talked about how to negate an answer choice, it’s also worth thinking about some standard negations that are likely to surface many times on your LSAT. Try to complete as many of these as possible. Feel free to answer in a comment. Answers will be posted in a week or so.
If you see… Negate with…I
All
Some
Most
Not all
None
Probably
Unlikely
Never
Always
Sometimes
Without
With
To be continued…
February LSAT 2010: Man vs. Machine
Posted by noah@atlaslsat.com in LSAT Experiences on February 9th, 2010
The February LSAT gets a bad rep for no good reason. I assure you, it’s just another LSAT (which may or may not make it worth a bad rep), but for one of my students the test was fine, but the test-center was awful. After an unexpected re-assignment to a location in a galaxy far, far away, my student — let’s call him Luke — found himself in a large auditorium. OK, that’s not so far out of the range of expectations. But, these auditorium seats were not built for the LSAT. The little flip-up desk seat was about half the size of the LSAT paper! So, not only did the 80 or so victims in there have to deal with the LSAT, but they were subjected to a constant spatial-relations puzzle/dance-dance revolution game in which you scored points by being able to keep your test on the table so that you could actually bubble in your answers.
Alright, perhaps he’s a whiner. When I was a kid we had to take the LSAT in a pool, walking uphill. But then partway through the first section - RC for him — the radiator started a John Cage piece. Many a New Yorker is well-accustomed to falling asleep to the erratic — erotic? — banging of the building’s heating system, but apparently this one was so loud that the test-takers revolted and the proctors paused the test at the end of the section to bring in an engineer. While the engineers calmed the angry beast, the hapless prisoner — at least those following the rules –were not allowed to go to the bathroom since this was not an “official” break.
At least 10% of the test-takers simply walked out of the room and canceled on the spot. Luke tells me he couldn’t finish that first section, which is unheard of for him, though he totally rocked the rest of the exam. Alas Luke, go and seek your LSAT destiny in June! And for everyone else, read up on your testing site (and rate yours) on this test-center-ranking site.
LSAT Vocabulary
Posted by noah@atlaslsat.com in Uncategorized on February 2nd, 2010
I just saw a good blog post listing vocabulary words that you should have under your belt for the LSAT. Take a look and see if you really know all of them. Thanks for the list, Steve!
LSAT Logical Reasoning Vocabulary Words
You probably know the meanings of most words in the Logical Reasoning section.
However, if you know what all the words mean, the arguments will be much easier to understand.
I’ve compiled a list of common, but difficult, vocabulary words just from glancing through 4-5 sections of Logical Reasoning (and throwing in some words that you absolutely must know), so this list is obviously not intended to be comprehensive.
Because the LSAT is not intended to be a vocabulary test, you probably know most of the below words already.
However, take a quick glance through this list and make sure you know them all.
Don’t spend a great deal of time focusing on vocabulary in your preparation. However, when you see a word you don’t understand, look it up. Just as the same concepts and types of arguments appear on multiple exams, the same words and phrases also appear on multiple exams.
Keep in mind that the LSAT sometimes uses one of a word’s less-common meanings
For example:
The LSAT often uses the word “phenomenon” to mean “event” rather than “something unusual.”
The LSAT often uses the word “advance” to mean “to promote an argument” rather than “to literally move something forward.”
Words directly related to arguments
Antecedent
Assertion
Assumption
Claim
Consequent
Contention
Correlation
Counterexample
Flaw
Inference
Necessary
Paradox
Premise
Principle
Proposition
Rebuttal
Subsidiary
Subsequent
Sufficient
Verbs
Accumulate
Advance
Advocate
Afford
Aggravate
Attribute
Betray
Circumvent
Compel
Conform
Constitute
Derive
Endorse
Ensure
Entail
Eschew
Equivocate
Guarantee
Imply
Impose
Indicate
Hold
Hypothesize
Justify
Oblige
Posit
Preclude
Predispose
Presuppose
Prevaricate
Qualify
Refute
Sustain
Undermine
Verify
Adverbs
Correspondingly
Intrinsically
Invariably
Manifestly
Purportedly
Solely
Strenuously
Adjectives
Aggregate
Altruistic
Ambiguous
Ample
Categorical
Coherent / Incoherent
Compatible / Incompatible
Confirming / Disconfirming
Consistent / Inconsistent
Cryptic
Crucial
Eccentric
Extant
Forseeable
Improbable
Indigenous
Indispensable
Mundane
Principal
Primary
Prominent
Questionable
Sedentary
Temporal
Unequivocal
Unwarranted
Unique
Valid / Invalid
Viable
Vulnerable (to criticism)
Nouns
Anomaly
Condition
Contingency
Extent
Generalization
Hearsay
Impediment
Imperturbable
Impetus
Inflation
Irony
Jurisprudence
Liability
Phenomenon
Placebo
Proportion
Pundit
Skeptic
Trial
Contrast
Principal vs. Principle
Extant vs. Extent
Thanks again, Steve!
LSAT Classes in Houston
Posted by noah@atlaslsat.com in Atlas Announcements on January 27th, 2010

Houston, Here We Come!
Hey, we’re ready to mess with Texas! We’ve added a great teacher to our ranks, Joey Ndu! He’s a true test whiz with years of teaching experience and a really great demeanor in the classroom. He’s a natural fit with our team, as he works hard to get students to figure out things for themselves.
We’re looking for a class location around University of Houston, and we’ll announce when we’ve found our home. Stay tuned, Texas!
P.S. Austin is next . . .
Doing well on the LSAT means no excuses
Posted by patty@atlaslsat.com in LSAT Experiences, LSAT Prep on January 22nd, 2010
As the February LSAT quickly approaches, I have been fielding many calls from worried and anxious students each day here. To be fair, test anxiety is real and we all want to excel in areas where we have invested considerable time, mental energy, and money. The LSAT and all of its test-takers are no different. However, what I have been recommending to students is to keep in mind the concept of attribution theory, especially for all you Type-A students out there.
What this means in lay-man terms is (pardon the language): Suck it up. Know what you can and can’t control. Be honest about your skills and your ability to excel. Be prepared for the worst because Murphy’s Law is alive and kicking.
I realize that this is much easier said than done, but cultivate your own fearlessness. Successful people do not believe in external attributions. Successful people believe that their successes are a result of 3 things:
(1) The reason for the success is a result of an internal cause: “I am awesome at rock band because I have great hand-eye-coordination.”
(2) The cause of the success is stable and reliable. “Because I have practiced and thoroughly reviewed assignment logic games so many darn times that I dream about them, I have developed a comprehensive arsenal of skills that I will be able to rely on even when under immense pressure on D-day.”
(3) My success is a direct result of my efforts, which are under my control. “I didn’t just get lucky at work. My boss liked my pitch for a new marketing campaign idea because I spent hours preparing a convincing argument and had answers to counteract questions from any detractors.”
What this all means for you is to prepare for the unexpected and cultivate a “can-do” attitude on the LSAT. Do not justify failure with external excuses.
Your testing center conditions will not be ideal and you WILL get stuck next to the only, coughing sick person in the room. (Or worse, you WILL be that only sick person in the room!) Reality is that the LSAT is only given 4 times a year though and even if you’re a little sick or your dog kept bothering you as you tried to sleep the night before, you need to work through these excuses. You have put in the hard work preparing for the LSAT and just because your proctor decides to be Chatty McChattersons, you cannot let that detract from your main goal: plowing through the LSAT using all of the skills you’ve worked on augmenting for however many months!
No excuses, now stop procrastinating and get back to studying! Don’t forget – bring a few logical reasoning questions or a game with you to warm-up your brain while you wait for the start and bring a banana for the break. Good luck!
Getting A Great Job After Law School?
Posted by noah@atlaslsat.com in Law School, post law school life on January 18th, 2010
This past weekend the New York Times had a sobering article explaining that law school is “No Longer the Golden Ticket.” Many people somehow assumed the the legal field was immune to the economic downturn. “Well, Wall Street is dead for now,” people thought, “so I’ll go for law school. Not as glamorous, but at least the money’s there.”
Turns out that big law firms are laying off big time and are not hiring many if any new lawyers. In fact, we’re seeing a lot of resumes of law school grads that are looking for something to do during their “gap year.” Overall, these folks are not making the Atlas cut, but many are quite bright. Interestingly, often they’ve been hired by some law firm and then told to not show up for a year and instead do something community-oriented (and these folks receive half their salaries, which is still a nice chunk of change). This sounds like a pretty good deal considering what many large law firms have young associates doing for the first couple of years (cue shot of Igor, the hunchback in old Frankenstein film creeping in the basement). As we see it, the problem is that when the economy picks up and folks start suing and merging with each other with gusto again, law firms will probably pick up their half-way house hires and hold off on taking new ones for a year or so. Basically, there’s a lawyer log jam. [Yes, that sounds like the end of a good lawyer joke.] Particularly since there’s been a 20% increase in LSAT test-takers this year!
So, what does this mean for you? Well, it truly does depend. If you are headed to law school because you really enjoy legal thinking, complex albeit sometimes boring puzzles, and technical reading and writing, then no worries. You’re probably where you should be. Perhaps you’ll have a tougher time getting a job out of the gate, but hang in there. There’s probably room for you, give or take a year of a job you’re not super-psyched about.
If you’re going to law school for a sure fire route to a quick $250K salary, then hold on a sec. Look around, talk to grads — both those who have landed jobs and those who have not — and consider holding off a year or so until the job market “normalizes.” Perhaps this is a good time to address some weaknesses in your application (like a weak LSAT score or a lack of community service, etc.).
P.S. And don’t forget that there is one more little (?) thing to keep in mind - law school debt.
Should I Re-Take the LSAT in February?
Posted by noah@atlaslsat.com in Applications, LSAT Prep on January 10th, 2010
Good question! First off, we’ll be discussing this in our upcoming workshop in which we’ll review the December LSAT.
If you’re just looking to take an LSAT, it doesn’t matter which one you take — just take it after you’ve prepared! But if you already have taken the LSAT and are wondering whether to re-take, there’s a lot more to say. The question of whether you should re-take in June, Sep/Oct, or Dec has one set of answers. If you are wondering whether to re-take in one of those non-February months, take a look at some previous posts - should I re-take the LSAT & how to improve your LSAT score. But for February you get a special set of answers just for you!
In general, the answer is NO. Here’s why (and thanks to Ann Levine for some help on this one):
1. It’s hard to improve an LSAT score significantly in one month. Caveats: if you truly had a bad day on test day, and having such a day is completely out of the ordinary for you, sure, a re-test could conceivably show serious improvement. But, so you know, most people don’t improve that much. For example, the average person who re-takes the LSAT with a score between 150 and 160 improves only 2.4 points on the re-take (and the re-take improvement gets worse as you go up the score ladder). For most people, those 2.4 points are not enough to significantly alter your application — and for most folks, those 2 and almost a half points definitely do not warrant a re-take because . . .
2. To submit an application and then say you’d like them to wait until your February score arrives means that because of rolling admissions, you’ll be competing for fewer spots than if you submit with a December score. (And you’re obligated to tell a school if you’re re-taking.) Similarly . . .
3. If you’re hoping to use a new score to convince a school to pull you off its waiting list and you’re submitting an application with a December score, the June LSAT should be just fine for such purposes.
This may be the excuse you were waiting for to not get back on the LSAT bandwagon for a while. For those of you who are going to go for the Feb re-take, good luck and dig deep to beat the averages!
