Applicable for Law Programmes (LSAT)
LSAT (Law School Admission Test) is a standardized law entrance examination conducted by the Law School Admission Council. In India, LSAT—India is accepted by leading private law colleges for admission into UG and PG law programmes.
Accepted by numerous universities and institutions across India for admission into various professional programs.
Evaluates candidates' aptitude through sections on analytical ability, logical reasoning, quantitative skills, and verbal competency
Offers a pathway to reputed colleges and enhances career opportunities in diverse fields and industries.
Who can apply for LSAT?
LSAT Schedule
Note: Exact dates are announced by NTA . Check the official website for updated schedule.
A. Core Game Types 1️⃣ Sequencing (Ordering Games) You arrange variables in order. Topics Covered: Linear sequencing (1–7 positions) Circular sequencing Relative ordering (A before B) Conditional ordering (If A is 3rd, B is 5th) Fixed vs floating variables Limited vs unlimited positions Skills Required: Diagramming accurately Making deductions before questions Identifying rule interactions 2️⃣ Grouping Games You assign items into groups. Topics Covered: Fixed number grouping Flexible grouping Balanced distribution Conditional grouping In/Out grouping Either/Or conditions Numerical restrictions (at least 2, at most 3) Skills Required: Tracking combinations Conditional logic chains Making templates 3️⃣ Matching / Assignment Games Two variables must be matched. Topics Covered: One-to-one matching One-to-many relationships Variable linking Restrictions across sets 4️⃣ Hybrid Games Combination of: Sequencing + grouping Matching + grouping These require advanced deduction speed. B. Logical Concepts Required Conditional Logic (If A → B) Contrapositive Necessary vs Sufficient conditions Mutually exclusive rules Deduction chains Rule synthesis
A. Argument Structure Topics You must understand: Premise Conclusion Intermediate conclusion Assumption (unstated link) Counterargument Background information B. Question Types (Complete List) 1️⃣ Strengthen Add support to the conclusion. 2️⃣ Weaken Undermine the argument. 3️⃣ Necessary Assumption Must be true for argument to work. 4️⃣ Sufficient Assumption Guarantees conclusion. 5️⃣ Flaw in Reasoning Identify logical mistake. Common flaws: Correlation vs causation Sampling bias False dilemma Circular reasoning Equivocation Overgeneralization Conditional confusion Strawman
6️⃣ Inference (Must Be True) Draw logical conclusions from facts. 7️⃣ Main Conclusion Identify primary claim. 8️⃣ Parallel Reasoning Match logical structure. 9️⃣ Resolve Paradox Explain contradiction. 🔟 Principle Questions Apply or identify general rule. 1️⃣1️⃣ Method of Reasoning Identify strategy used. 1️⃣2️⃣ Role of Statement What function does a sentence serve? C. Logical Concepts Tested Deductive reasoning Inductive reasoning Cause-effect analysis Probability reasoning Analogical reasoning Conditional reasoning Quantifier logic (some, most, all, none) Formal logic patterns
A. Passage Topics Usually drawn from: Law Science Philosophy Social sciences Political theory History Ethics Economics B. Skills Tested 1️⃣ Main Idea Summarize entire passage. 2️⃣ Structure Recognition Why is each paragraph written? Example Counterargument Evidence Theory explanation Comparison 3️⃣ Author’s Tone & Attitude Neutral Skeptical Supportive Critical Qualified approval