I really liked that GROUPED by Game Type uses only questions from the earlier PrepTests so I knew there was no overlap when I did practice test later on...I just did game after game after game of each type until I finally started getting it. By doing this, I went from only being able to finish 3 out of the 4 games on practice tests to getting zero wrong on the real thing...a must for anyone not consistently getting -1 or -0 on the logic games section!
- Savannah Hart, customer from Amazon.com
GROUPED by Question Type has a lot of study material...I know a lot of LSAT prep books give tips on how to study or strategies but this book gave me material to study. Practicing the questions helps you come up with a strategy on how to approach the questions during the LSAT. It becomes muscle memory for the brain in a way that reading about test strategy will never compare to.
- Linga, customer from Amazon.com
Many students particularly dislike the passages about art or literature, and [GROUPED by Passage Type]'s categorization of passages by subject matter helps students to get over the psychological barrier associated with a given type of passage...ideal for supplementary practice, or for practice on improving speed.
- Kyle Singhal, tutor with Metroplex LSAT Prep
[The GROUPED Books] are a nice contribution to the world of LSAT prep.
- John Richardson, author of Law School Bound
Great tool for mastering logic games. I am a professional LSAT tutor, and I use [More GROUPED by Game Type] as a workbook for teaching my students the logic games...I teach them a strategy for diagramming and solving a certain type of game, and then they are able to apply that strategy several times over to reinforce their learning. Highly recommended.
- Kyle Singhal, tutor with Metroplex LSAT Prep
More GROUPED by Question Type is better than Kaplan LSAT Mastery Practice...It organizes logical reasoning questions according to their various types, while the Kaplan Mastery book lumps together some questions that are very unlike each other and just includes a random assortment of questions
- Steve Schwartz, author of LSAT Blog