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LSAT to Study the GMAT Part 3: Reading Comprehension
Reading Comprehension seems to be the most logical subject to transfer from the LSAT to the GMAT. The subject matter is similar (natural sciences, social sciences, humanities) as are the question types (Primary Purpose, Specific (Detail), Inference, etc.) There are some differences but nothing that would make the LSAT passages unsuitable to study.
Understand the GMAT before Using LSAT Passages:
Before using any LSAT Passages it is important that you have a good strategy for mastering the passages that you will encounter on the GMAT. Therefore I recommend that you work with at least two GMAT sources before moving to LSAT passages. One of these sources should be the Official Guide (11th or 12th edition or the Verbal Review 1st or 2nd edition).
The other - and possibly more important source - is one that provides you with a strategy for attacking GMAT reading comprehension passages. For example, the Veritas Reading Comprehension book provides a strategy for actually comprehending (as opposed to just reading) the passage as well as a breakdown of the question types and a strategy to attack each. Other good strategy books are available as well, choose one that works for you. Also, as mentioned in point 2 below, the Official Guide simply does not provide enough difficult passages to allow you to really be comfortable with the toughest passages on test day. Your second GMAT source should provide some of these as well.
Understanding the Differences between the LSAT and GMAT Passages:
1) Time Pressure:
The biggest difference is the time limit for LSAT reading comprehension. On the LSAT 4 passages and a total of 26 - 28 questions have to be completed in just 35 minutes. That is an average of about 1 minute and 15 seconds per question (including the time needed to read the passages). A GMAT test-taker who is good at Sentence Correction can take 2 minutes per question on reading comprehension or about 45 seconds more per question. So the LSAT reading comprehension passages and questions do not need to be more difficult than those on the GMAT (and they are not) in order for the entire section to be more difficulty - the time pressure takes care of that.
2) Consistency:
The GMAT has a greater range of difficulty in reading comprehension than does the LSAT. The GMAT is adaptive, so the official GMAT publications (such as the Official Guide 12th Edition and the Verbal Review 2nd Edition) have a wide variety of reading comprehension passages. Many of these passages, especially the earliest in the sections are much simpler and shorter (often around 200 words) than what a student would need to be prepared for on test day. In the 12th Edition there are really only about 5 passages - all toward the end of the section - that provide that dreaded combination of length (350 to 500 words), difficult vocabulary, density of concepts, and subtle questions. This is the type of passage that everyone fears on test day and the Official Guide simply does not have enough of them. Some LSAT passages provide this combination, especially science passages. (The second reading comp passage that I plan to post is one of these very difficult ones).
3) Length of Passages:
The LSAT passages are longer and they have more questions for each passage: But this is not a bad thing. It would not be so useful for your stamina to study LSAT Reading Comprehension if it was shorter than the GMAT! And LSAT passages are not too much longer than GMAT passages.
4) Density of Concepts/ Vocabulary:
In general, GMAT passages are more tightly packed with concepts and vocabulary. On average, LSAT passages are longer so the concepts are spread out more and can be more understandable. The very most difficult GMAT passages are more difficult than those on the LSAT (if you don't take into account the fact that on the LSAT they have 3 or 4 minutes less time per passage). However, the average LSAT passage is at least as difficult as the average GMAT passage.
5) Subject matter
The subject tested on the LSAT and GMAT reading comp are similar with a few exceptions. The GMAT has many more business passages, while the LSAT has, you guessed it, more legal passages. This might be a good thing, though as the legal passages can really take some focus (they are often long and boring) and so this can help with stamina and concentration. Also, the GMAT has more science passages. If you have a limited amount of time to use LSAT materials to study you may want to go for the science passages - if those are difficult for you on the GMAT. Both tests have similar humanities and history passages.
6) Question Types
As with subject matter, the question types are more similar than different. LSAT questions will ask you for the "main idea" although in different ways - while the GMAT nearly always phrases the main idea question as "what is the primary purpose?" On the GMAT around half of all questions are detail questions that are best attacked by returning to the passage and rereading the relevant portion. This is true on the LSAT as well. There are more function questions on the LSAT, such as "what is the function of the second paragraph?" Since these are often difficult for students and very few are provided in the Official Guide it is good that the LSAT has more.
Where to find LSAT questions:
So, if you feel like this might be a good source of questions for you, you will want to know that LSAT questions are most easily (and legally) available in the "10 Actual, Official LSAT" series from LSAC - the Law School Admissions Council. Each of these books contains 10 LSAT tests, which add up to about 500 critical reasoning questions. Each book also contains 40 reading comprehension passages for a total of over 250 reading comp questions. It does not matter which edition of the "10 Official LSAT" books you buy as you are not looking for the latest LSAT questions. If you buy one of the older books you can probably get it cheap. Look for tests prior to 2007 that is when the LSAT added "comparative passages" to the reading comprehension. Comparative Passages are not on the GMAT.
Ways to make your studying of LSAT questions more effective.
A) Do NOT write in the book. Pretend the passage is on the computer and you cannot write on it. It is a very different thing to work with a passage that you cannot mark. Take very limited notes only.
B) If possible use a cook book stand or some other way to hold the book vertical as you do the questions. It is easier to read and work with something that is horizontal. But a computer screen is vertical so you need to practice.
C) Use your yellow note boards. Use the type of laminated board that you will be using on test day. Veritas and other companies have these for sale. If you do not have such a board use scratch paper and a pen (so you are not tempted to erase). Try to simulate test day!
D) If you do a full LSAT section give yourself about 50 to 56 minutes for the section. On the LSAT they only get 35 minutes but on the GMAT you get up to about 2 minutes per question (if you are efficient at sentence correction).
E) Better yet, Mix it up! Rather than doing a full LSAT reading comp section, mix it up as you would on the GMAT. One reading passage then on to some critical reasoning and sentence correction before you come back for another reading comp. Remember, the GMAT never lets you get into that flow of doing one type of question.
I have posted a sample LSAT passage in the Reading Comp forum at https://www.beatthegmat.com/lsat-reading ... 71360.html
If you missed the first two parts of this series they are at the following links:
Part 1) https://www.beatthegmat.com/using-the-ls ... 66548.html
Part 2) https://www.beatthegmat.com/lsat-to-stud ... 69915.html
Reading Comprehension seems to be the most logical subject to transfer from the LSAT to the GMAT. The subject matter is similar (natural sciences, social sciences, humanities) as are the question types (Primary Purpose, Specific (Detail), Inference, etc.) There are some differences but nothing that would make the LSAT passages unsuitable to study.
Understand the GMAT before Using LSAT Passages:
Before using any LSAT Passages it is important that you have a good strategy for mastering the passages that you will encounter on the GMAT. Therefore I recommend that you work with at least two GMAT sources before moving to LSAT passages. One of these sources should be the Official Guide (11th or 12th edition or the Verbal Review 1st or 2nd edition).
The other - and possibly more important source - is one that provides you with a strategy for attacking GMAT reading comprehension passages. For example, the Veritas Reading Comprehension book provides a strategy for actually comprehending (as opposed to just reading) the passage as well as a breakdown of the question types and a strategy to attack each. Other good strategy books are available as well, choose one that works for you. Also, as mentioned in point 2 below, the Official Guide simply does not provide enough difficult passages to allow you to really be comfortable with the toughest passages on test day. Your second GMAT source should provide some of these as well.
Understanding the Differences between the LSAT and GMAT Passages:
1) Time Pressure:
The biggest difference is the time limit for LSAT reading comprehension. On the LSAT 4 passages and a total of 26 - 28 questions have to be completed in just 35 minutes. That is an average of about 1 minute and 15 seconds per question (including the time needed to read the passages). A GMAT test-taker who is good at Sentence Correction can take 2 minutes per question on reading comprehension or about 45 seconds more per question. So the LSAT reading comprehension passages and questions do not need to be more difficult than those on the GMAT (and they are not) in order for the entire section to be more difficulty - the time pressure takes care of that.
2) Consistency:
The GMAT has a greater range of difficulty in reading comprehension than does the LSAT. The GMAT is adaptive, so the official GMAT publications (such as the Official Guide 12th Edition and the Verbal Review 2nd Edition) have a wide variety of reading comprehension passages. Many of these passages, especially the earliest in the sections are much simpler and shorter (often around 200 words) than what a student would need to be prepared for on test day. In the 12th Edition there are really only about 5 passages - all toward the end of the section - that provide that dreaded combination of length (350 to 500 words), difficult vocabulary, density of concepts, and subtle questions. This is the type of passage that everyone fears on test day and the Official Guide simply does not have enough of them. Some LSAT passages provide this combination, especially science passages. (The second reading comp passage that I plan to post is one of these very difficult ones).
3) Length of Passages:
The LSAT passages are longer and they have more questions for each passage: But this is not a bad thing. It would not be so useful for your stamina to study LSAT Reading Comprehension if it was shorter than the GMAT! And LSAT passages are not too much longer than GMAT passages.
4) Density of Concepts/ Vocabulary:
In general, GMAT passages are more tightly packed with concepts and vocabulary. On average, LSAT passages are longer so the concepts are spread out more and can be more understandable. The very most difficult GMAT passages are more difficult than those on the LSAT (if you don't take into account the fact that on the LSAT they have 3 or 4 minutes less time per passage). However, the average LSAT passage is at least as difficult as the average GMAT passage.
5) Subject matter
The subject tested on the LSAT and GMAT reading comp are similar with a few exceptions. The GMAT has many more business passages, while the LSAT has, you guessed it, more legal passages. This might be a good thing, though as the legal passages can really take some focus (they are often long and boring) and so this can help with stamina and concentration. Also, the GMAT has more science passages. If you have a limited amount of time to use LSAT materials to study you may want to go for the science passages - if those are difficult for you on the GMAT. Both tests have similar humanities and history passages.
6) Question Types
As with subject matter, the question types are more similar than different. LSAT questions will ask you for the "main idea" although in different ways - while the GMAT nearly always phrases the main idea question as "what is the primary purpose?" On the GMAT around half of all questions are detail questions that are best attacked by returning to the passage and rereading the relevant portion. This is true on the LSAT as well. There are more function questions on the LSAT, such as "what is the function of the second paragraph?" Since these are often difficult for students and very few are provided in the Official Guide it is good that the LSAT has more.
Where to find LSAT questions:
So, if you feel like this might be a good source of questions for you, you will want to know that LSAT questions are most easily (and legally) available in the "10 Actual, Official LSAT" series from LSAC - the Law School Admissions Council. Each of these books contains 10 LSAT tests, which add up to about 500 critical reasoning questions. Each book also contains 40 reading comprehension passages for a total of over 250 reading comp questions. It does not matter which edition of the "10 Official LSAT" books you buy as you are not looking for the latest LSAT questions. If you buy one of the older books you can probably get it cheap. Look for tests prior to 2007 that is when the LSAT added "comparative passages" to the reading comprehension. Comparative Passages are not on the GMAT.
Ways to make your studying of LSAT questions more effective.
A) Do NOT write in the book. Pretend the passage is on the computer and you cannot write on it. It is a very different thing to work with a passage that you cannot mark. Take very limited notes only.
B) If possible use a cook book stand or some other way to hold the book vertical as you do the questions. It is easier to read and work with something that is horizontal. But a computer screen is vertical so you need to practice.
C) Use your yellow note boards. Use the type of laminated board that you will be using on test day. Veritas and other companies have these for sale. If you do not have such a board use scratch paper and a pen (so you are not tempted to erase). Try to simulate test day!
D) If you do a full LSAT section give yourself about 50 to 56 minutes for the section. On the LSAT they only get 35 minutes but on the GMAT you get up to about 2 minutes per question (if you are efficient at sentence correction).
E) Better yet, Mix it up! Rather than doing a full LSAT reading comp section, mix it up as you would on the GMAT. One reading passage then on to some critical reasoning and sentence correction before you come back for another reading comp. Remember, the GMAT never lets you get into that flow of doing one type of question.
I have posted a sample LSAT passage in the Reading Comp forum at https://www.beatthegmat.com/lsat-reading ... 71360.html
If you missed the first two parts of this series they are at the following links:
Part 1) https://www.beatthegmat.com/using-the-ls ... 66548.html
Part 2) https://www.beatthegmat.com/lsat-to-stud ... 69915.html

















