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												Résumé : 
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												The LSAT is not a test of what you know. LSAT questions hinge on fundamental reading skills and common sens; a super-smart eight grader could conceivably get a perfect score on the exam. The LSAT is a test of how you think, a very challenging test of how you think. And yet every other LSAT book out there is only interested in telling you what you need to know. This book is different. Knowledge is good, but it's not enough. Strategies are good too, but they aren't enough either. And of course you need practice, but you don't get a top score just because you practiced hard. To master the LSAT, you need to develop LSAT-specific skills and habits. You need to be able to picture game scenarios accurately every single time. You don't need to be lectured to, and you don't need to learn how to read faster. You need specific training, and targeted practice. This book will help you train for the LSAT like no other book can. (source : 4ème de couverture)
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