LSAT Prep

Identify the Role | Logical Reasoning Worked Examples | LSAT Prep Guide

Master LSAT "identify the role" questions with detailed worked examples, proven strategies, and official practice resources. Learn to recognize statement functions in arguments and boost your Logical Reasoning score.

Identify the Role: Logical Reasoning Worked Examples for LSAT Prep

"Identify the role" questions, also called "argument role" or "function" questions, ask you to determine what specific function a statement plays within an argument. Unlike questions that ask you to evaluate argument quality or identify flaws, these questions are purely descriptive. Your task is to accurately categorize how a particular claim fits into the argument's logical structure.

Role questions typically represent 4-6% of all Logical Reasoning questions on the LSAT. The Law School Admission Council tests your ability to analyze argument structure by identifying whether a statement serves as the main conclusion, a premise supporting the conclusion, an intermediate conclusion, a concession to an opposing view, or another argumentative component. Mastering these questions requires strong structural analysis skills and the ability to trace how premises connect to conclusions.

Understanding Role Questions

What Makes Role Questions Unique?

Role questions are descriptive, not evaluative. You're analyzing the structure and function of statements within an argument, not judging whether the reasoning is sound or flawed. Think of yourself as an architect examining a building's blueprint, identifying what purpose each component serves in the overall structure.

The key distinction: These questions ask "What is this statement doing?" not "What is this statement saying?" Understanding content is necessary but insufficient—you must identify the statement's structural function.

How to Recognize Role Questions

Common Question Stems:

  • "The claim that [STATEMENT] plays which one of the following roles in the argument?"
  • "Which one of the following most accurately describes the role played in the argument by the claim that [STATEMENT]?"
  • "The statement that [STATEMENT] figures in the argument in which one of the following ways?"
  • "In the argument, the claim that [STATEMENT] is used to..."
  • "The assertion that [STATEMENT] serves which one of the following functions in the argument?"

Identifying Feature: Role questions typically quote a specific statement from the stimulus directly in the question stem, making them easy to recognize before you even read the argument.

Core Strategy for Role Questions

Five-Step Systematic Approach

Step 1Mark the Statement Before Reading

Before you read the stimulus, identify and mark the statement mentioned in the question stem. Underline it, bracket it, or highlight it so you can easily locate it while reading. This ensures you focus on its role from the start.

Step 2Identify the Main Conclusion

Find the argument's main conclusion—the primary claim the author is trying to prove. Look for conclusion indicators like "therefore," "thus," "hence," "so," or "consequently." Ask: What is the author ultimately trying to convince me of?

Step 3Map the Argument Structure

Identify all premises (evidence supporting the conclusion), intermediate conclusions (claims that are both supported by evidence and support other claims), and any opposing views or concessions. Create a mental map of how ideas connect.

Step 4Categorize the Marked Statement

Determine what role the marked statement plays. Ask these diagnostic questions:

  • Is this the main conclusion?
  • Does it support the conclusion? (If yes, it's a premise or subsidiary conclusion)
  • Is it supported by other statements AND does it support another claim? (If yes, it's an intermediate conclusion)
  • Does it represent an opposing view the author is rejecting?

Step 5Predict Before Evaluating Answers

Before looking at answer choices, state in your own simple words what role the statement plays. For example: "This is a premise that directly supports the main conclusion." Then find the answer choice that matches your prediction.

Common Statement Roles

Role 1: Main Conclusion

Definition: The primary claim the argument is trying to establish. Everything else in the argument exists to support this.

How to Identify: Often preceded by conclusion indicators. Never directly supports any other claim—only receives support. Ask: "What is the author trying to prove?"

Answer Choice Language: "It is the conclusion drawn in the argument" or "It expresses the main point the argument is designed to establish"

Role 2: Premise (Direct Support)

Definition: Evidence or reasoning offered in direct support of the conclusion. Premises are foundational claims that aren't themselves argued for within the passage.

How to Identify: Often preceded by premise indicators like "because," "since," "given that," or "for." Answers the question "Why should I believe the conclusion?"

Answer Choice Language: "It is a premise offered in support of the conclusion" or "It provides evidence for the argument's main claim"

Role 3: Intermediate/Subsidiary Conclusion

Definition: A claim that is both supported by other statements AND itself supports another claim. It's a stepping stone in the argument's reasoning chain.

How to Identify: Has evidence supporting it (so it's a conclusion of a sub-argument) but also supports the main conclusion (so it's a premise for the main argument).

Answer Choice Language: "It is a conclusion that supports the main conclusion" or "It is an intermediate conclusion used to support the argument's main point"

Visual Structure:

Premise → Intermediate Conclusion → Main Conclusion

Role 4: Opposing View / Counterargument

Definition: A claim the author presents in order to reject or argue against it. Not the author's own position.

How to Identify: Look for phrases like "Critics argue that," "Some claim that," or "It has been said that." The author typically follows with a rebuttal.

Answer Choice Language: "It presents a view that the argument opposes" or "It is a claim that the argument seeks to refute"

Role 5: Concession

Definition: A point the author acknowledges as true, even though it might seem to weaken their position. Often followed by "but" or "however" and a stronger counterpoint.

How to Identify: Look for phrases like "Admittedly," "It is true that," or "While X may be the case." The author grants this point but argues it doesn't undermine the main conclusion.

Answer Choice Language: "It is a concession that the argument acknowledges" or "It presents a consideration that the argument accepts but argues does not undermine the conclusion"

Role 6: Background Information / Context

Definition: Information that provides context or sets up the argument but doesn't directly support the conclusion.

How to Identify: Typically appears at the beginning. Describes a situation, defines terms, or provides history without serving as evidence for the conclusion.

Answer Choice Language: "It provides context for the argument" or "It describes a phenomenon that the argument seeks to explain"

Role 7: Statement with No Logical Role

Definition: A statement that is factually present in the argument but doesn't contribute to the logical structure—neither supporting the conclusion nor being an opposing view.

How to Identify: Rare, but when present, the statement is tangential or purely illustrative without bearing on the reasoning.

Answer Choice Language: "It plays no logical role in the argument" (This answer appears occasionally and is correct when applicable)

Worked Example 1: Official LSAC Question

Driver's Seat Position and Safety

Does the position of a car driver's seat have a significant impact on driving safety? It probably does. Driving position affects both comfort and the ability to see the road clearly. A driver who is uncomfortable eventually becomes fatigued, which makes it difficult to concentrate on the road. Likewise, the better the visibility from the driver's seat, the more aware the driver can be of road conditions and other vehicles.

Which one of the following most accurately describes the role played in the argument by the claim that driving position affects both comfort and the ability to see the road clearly?

Answer Choices:

(A) It is the conclusion drawn in the argument.
(B) It is a claim that the argument shows to be inconsistent with available evidence.
(C) It is used to provide a causal explanation for an observed phenomenon.
(D) It describes evidence that the argument ultimately refutes.
(E) It is a premise offered in support of the conclusion drawn in the argument.

Detailed Solution

Step 1Mark the Statement

The question asks about the role of: "Driving position affects both comfort and the ability to see the road clearly."

This statement is in the third sentence of the stimulus. We've highlighted it above.

Step 2Identify the Main Conclusion

The argument begins with a question: "Does the position of a car driver's seat have a significant impact on driving safety?" The answer immediately follows: "It probably does."

This is the main conclusion. The author is arguing that seat position probably impacts safety. The word "probably" is the conclusion indicator here, and everything that follows supports this claim.

Step 3Map the Argument Structure

Let's break down the complete structure:

Main Conclusion: Seat position probably has significant impact on driving safety
Premise (the marked statement): Driving position affects both comfort and visibility
Supporting Evidence:
• Discomfort → fatigue → difficulty concentrating
• Better visibility → more awareness of conditions

Step 4Apply the "Why Should I Believe That?" Test

To determine if a statement is a premise, ask: "Does this statement answer the question 'Why should I believe the conclusion?'"

Question: Why should I believe that seat position impacts driving safety?
Answer: Because driving position affects comfort and visibility.

Yes! The marked statement directly answers why we should believe the conclusion. This confirms it's functioning as a premise.

Step 5Predict the Answer

Before looking at choices, our prediction is: "The statement is a premise that supports the main conclusion."

The marked statement provides direct evidence for why seat position affects safety. It's not the conclusion itself (that was "It probably does"), and it's not an opposing view. It's straightforward support.

AnswerWhy (E) Is Correct

Choice (E) states: "It is a premise offered in support of the conclusion drawn in the argument."

This perfectly matches our prediction. The statement about comfort and visibility is indeed offered as a reason to believe the conclusion that seat position impacts safety.

EliminationWhy Other Answers Are Wrong

(A) "It is the conclusion drawn in the argument"

The conclusion is "It probably does" (seat position probably impacts safety). The marked statement supports this conclusion rather than being the conclusion itself. We can test this: Does anything in the argument support the marked statement? Yes—the sentences about fatigue and visibility support it. Conclusions aren't supported by other claims; they only receive support.

(B) "It is a claim that the argument shows to be inconsistent with available evidence"

The argument doesn't challenge or show inconsistency with the marked statement. Instead, the argument uses this statement to support its conclusion. The author accepts it as true.

(C) "It is used to provide a causal explanation for an observed phenomenon"

There is no "observed phenomenon" being explained here. The argument is making a prediction or hypothesis about whether seat position impacts safety—not explaining something that has already been observed. The structure is "This probably happens" not "Here's why this observed thing happened."

(D) "It describes evidence that the argument ultimately refutes"

The argument doesn't refute this statement. The author relies on it as support for the conclusion. Refutation would involve arguing against or rejecting the claim, but the author embraces it.

💡 KEY INSIGHT:The marked statement has a dual nature—it's supported by subsequent sentences AND it supports the main conclusion. However, the question asks about its role "in the argument" as a whole. In relation to the main conclusion, it functions as a premise. The subsequent sentences provide additional detail about how this premise works, but the marked statement's primary role is supporting the main point.

Worked Example 2: Intermediate Conclusion

Restaurant Health Inspections

Restaurant health inspections should be conducted more frequently. Studies have shown that restaurants inspected monthly have 40% fewer health violations than those inspected quarterly. More frequent inspections lead to better hygiene practices. Better hygiene practices reduce the risk of foodborne illness. Therefore, increasing inspection frequency would protect public health.

The claim that more frequent inspections lead to better hygiene practices plays which one of the following roles in the argument?

Answer Choices:

(A) It is the main conclusion of the argument.
(B) It is a premise that directly supports the main conclusion.
(C) It is an intermediate conclusion that is supported by evidence and itself supports the main conclusion.
(D) It is background information that provides context for the argument.
(E) It is an opposing view that the argument seeks to refute.

Complete Analysis

StructureIdentify All Components

Let's map the complete argument structure:

MAIN CONCLUSION:
Increasing inspection frequency would protect public health
↑ Supported by
Better hygiene practices reduce the risk of foodborne illness
↑ Supported by
INTERMEDIATE CONCLUSION:
More frequent inspections lead to better hygiene practices
↑ Supported by
PREMISE:
Studies show monthly inspections = 40% fewer violations vs quarterly

AnalysisTest the Marked Statement's Dual Role

Does it receive support? YES. The study data about 40% fewer violations supports the claim that frequent inspections lead to better hygiene.

Does it provide support? YES. This claim, combined with the statement about hygiene reducing illness, supports the main conclusion about protecting public health.

When a statement both receives and provides support, it's an intermediate conclusion—a stepping stone in the logical chain.

RecognitionHow to Spot Intermediate Conclusions

Intermediate conclusions often appear in multi-step arguments where the reasoning builds progressively:

  • Pattern: Evidence → Sub-conclusion → Main conclusion
  • Test 1: Can you point to evidence supporting this claim? (If yes, it's a conclusion of something)
  • Test 2: Does this claim support another claim? (If yes, it's a premise for something)
  • Both yes? It's an intermediate conclusion

AnswerWhy (C) Is Correct

"It is an intermediate conclusion that is supported by evidence and itself supports the main conclusion"

This precisely describes the statement's role:

  • ✓ "supported by evidence" = the study data supports it
  • ✓ "itself supports the main conclusion" = it's part of the reasoning chain leading to the conclusion about public health
  • ✓ "intermediate conclusion" = it's both a conclusion and a premise

EliminationWhy Other Answers Fail

(A) "It is the main conclusion of the argument"

The main conclusion is the final statement about protecting public health (signaled by "Therefore"). The marked statement is a step toward that conclusion, not the ultimate point.

(B) "It is a premise that directly supports the main conclusion"

This is tempting because the statement does support the conclusion. However, it's not just a premise—it's also itself supported by the study data. A pure premise would only give support without receiving any. This statement does both.

(D) "It is background information that provides context for the argument"

Background information doesn't participate in the logical structure. This statement is integral to the reasoning—it's not just contextual setup.

(E) "It is an opposing view that the argument seeks to refute"

The author endorses this claim; it's not an opposing view. There's no indication the author disagrees with or argues against this statement.

🎯 RECOGNITION TIP:Intermediate conclusions often appear in the middle of arguments and are introduced by words like "thus," "so," or "this means." They represent logical progress—a claim that's been established and is now being used to establish something further. Think of them as stepping stones: you need them to cross the river, but reaching them isn't your final destination.

Worked Example 3: Opposing View

Artificial Intelligence and Employment

Some economists argue that artificial intelligence will eliminate millions of jobs and create mass unemployment. However, this pessimistic view overlooks historical patterns. Every major technological revolution, from the steam engine to computers, initially displaced workers but ultimately created more jobs than it destroyed. The same will likely be true for AI. Rather than causing permanent unemployment, AI will shift workers into new roles that we cannot yet envision.

The statement that some economists argue artificial intelligence will eliminate millions of jobs and create mass unemployment plays which one of the following roles in the argument?

Answer Choices:

(A) It is the main conclusion that the argument seeks to establish.
(B) It is a premise that supports the argument's main conclusion.
(C) It is an intermediate conclusion derived from historical evidence.
(D) It presents a view that the argument opposes and seeks to refute.
(E) It is a concession that the argument acknowledges before presenting counterevidence.

Step-by-Step Solution

Step 1Identify Speaker Attribution

The marked statement is attributed to "Some economists argue..." This immediately signals that it may not be the author's own view. The phrase "some economists argue" introduces an external viewpoint.

Key phrases that signal opposing views:

  • "Critics claim that..."
  • "Some argue that..."
  • "It is often said that..."
  • "Many believe that..."

Step 2Identify the Author's Response

Immediately after the marked statement, the author says: "However, this pessimistic view overlooks historical patterns."

The word "However" is a contrast indicator, and "this pessimistic view overlooks" is explicitly critical. The author is disagreeing with the economists' view.

Step 3Identify the Author's Actual Conclusion

The author's conclusion is: "Rather than causing permanent unemployment, AI will shift workers into new roles."

This directly contradicts the economists' view that AI will "create mass unemployment." The argument structure is:

Opposing View: AI will cause mass unemployment
Author's Rebuttal: No, this overlooks history
Author's Evidence: Past technological revolutions created more jobs
Author's Conclusion: AI will shift workers to new roles, not create permanent unemployment

AnswerWhy (D) Is Correct

"It presents a view that the argument opposes and seeks to refute"

  • ✓ "presents a view" = introduces the economists' position
  • ✓ "that the argument opposes" = the author disagrees (signaled by "However")
  • ✓ "seeks to refute" = the entire argument is devoted to showing why this view is wrong

EliminationWhy Other Answers Are Wrong

(A) "It is the main conclusion that the argument seeks to establish"

This is the opposite of the truth. The argument seeks to reject this claim, not establish it. The main conclusion is that AI will shift workers to new roles.

(B) "It is a premise that supports the argument's main conclusion"

The marked statement doesn't support the author's conclusion—it contradicts it. The author uses historical patterns as premises, not the economists' claim.

(C) "It is an intermediate conclusion derived from historical evidence"

The economists' view is not derived from the historical evidence. In fact, the author says it "overlooks historical patterns"—the historical evidence contradicts this view.

(E) "It is a concession that the argument acknowledges before presenting counterevidence"

A concession is something the author accepts as true while arguing it doesn't undermine the conclusion. Here, the author doesn't accept the economists' view as true—the author rejects it entirely. There's no "this may be true, but..." structure here. It's "this is wrong because..."

⚡ CRITICAL DISTINCTION:Opposing View vs. Concession

Opposing View: The author says this is WRONG. Structure: "X says Y, but Y is incorrect because Z."

Concession: The author says this is TRUE but doesn't matter. Structure: "X may be true, but it doesn't affect my conclusion because Y."

Common Traps in Role Questions

Avoid These Pitfalls

Trap 1: Confusing Content with Function

Focus on what the statement DOES, not what it SAYS. Two statements with similar content can play different roles—one might be a conclusion while another is a premise supporting a different conclusion.

Trap 2: Incomplete Answer Matching

An answer choice might correctly identify part of the role but be wrong about other aspects. For example, it might correctly say a statement "supports the conclusion" but incorrectly identify WHICH conclusion it supports.

Trap 3: Missing Intermediate Conclusions

When a statement both receives and provides support, many test-takers incorrectly classify it as just a premise or just a conclusion. Look for statements that serve dual functions.

Trap 4: Misidentifying the Main Conclusion

If you incorrectly identify the main conclusion, you'll likely mischaracterize other statements' roles. Always find the main conclusion first.

Trap 5: Confusing Author's Voice with Others' Views

When multiple viewpoints appear, track carefully whose view is whose. A statement might represent an opposing view, not the author's position.

Trap 6: Overlooking Background Information

Not every statement in an argument plays a logical role in the reasoning. Some statements provide context without serving as premises or conclusions.

Role Identification Quick Reference

Statement RoleDiagnostic QuestionsCommon Answer Language
Main ConclusionIs this what the author ultimately wants to prove? Does it only receive support without supporting anything else?"It is the conclusion drawn in the argument" / "It expresses the main point"
PremiseDoes this provide evidence for the conclusion? Does it answer "Why should I believe the conclusion?""It is a premise offered in support of the conclusion" / "It provides evidence for the main claim"
Intermediate ConclusionIs this claim supported by other statements AND does it support another claim?"It is a subsidiary conclusion used to support the main conclusion" / "It is both supported and provides support"
Opposing ViewIs this presented as someone else's view that the author disagrees with?"It presents a view that the argument opposes" / "It is a claim the argument seeks to refute"
ConcessionDoes the author acknowledge this as true while arguing it doesn't undermine the conclusion?"It is a concession that the argument acknowledges" / "It presents a point the author accepts but argues is not decisive"
Background/ContextDoes this set up the discussion without serving as evidence or conclusion?"It provides background information" / "It describes a phenomenon the argument seeks to explain"
CounterexampleIs this a specific case offered to refute a general claim?"It provides an example that contradicts a general claim" / "It serves as a counterexample"
Illustration/AnalogyIs this a comparison or example used to clarify or support a claim?"It provides an illustration of the principle" / "It offers an analogy to support the argument"

Advanced Strategies

The "Because-Therefore" Reconstruction

Technique: Mentally rewrite the argument in "because-therefore" format to clarify relationships:

[Conclusion], because [premises/intermediate conclusions].

If you can insert the marked statement after "because" and it makes sense as a reason for the conclusion, it's functioning as support (either premise or intermediate conclusion).

The Support Direction Test

For each statement, ask:

  • Arrow Pointing IN: Does evidence point to this statement? (If yes, it's some type of conclusion)
  • Arrow Pointing OUT: Does this statement point to another claim? (If yes, it's some type of premise)
  • Both Arrows: If both, it's an intermediate conclusion
  • No Arrows: If neither, it's background, opposing view, or plays no logical role

Timing Strategy: Role questions are typically faster than other Logical Reasoning question types once you master structural analysis. Target 1-1.5 minutes per question.

Priority Steps:

  1. Mark the statement (10 seconds)
  2. Find main conclusion (15-20 seconds)
  3. Map argument structure (20-30 seconds)
  4. Categorize marked statement (10 seconds)
  5. Match to answer (15-20 seconds)

Official LSAT Prep Resources

Law School Admission Council - Official Resources

Primary Official Source: LSAC Official Website

Free Official Resources:

Premium Official Resources:

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Completely free LSAT prep in official partnership with LSAC:

  • Identify the Role Lessons: Dedicated instruction on role questions
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Frequently Asked Questions

How do I distinguish between a premise and an intermediate conclusion?

Apply the dual support test: (1) Is this statement supported by other statements in the argument? (2) Does this statement support another claim? If you answer YES to both questions, it's an intermediate conclusion. If you answer YES only to question 2, it's a premise. Premises provide support but don't receive it within the argument; intermediate conclusions both receive and provide support. For example, if the argument says "Studies show X, therefore Y, which means Z," then Y is an intermediate conclusion (supported by X, supports Z) while the studies are pure premises.

What if I can't find the main conclusion?

Try these strategies: (1) Look for conclusion indicators like "therefore," "thus," "hence," "so," or "consequently." (2) Ask "What is the author trying to convince me of?" The answer is usually the conclusion. (3) Use the "Why?" test—if you can ask "Why?" after a statement and the argument provides an answer, that statement is likely a conclusion (the "Why?" is answered by premises). (4) Identify what statement receives the most support—that's typically the main conclusion. (5) Look at the final sentence, as LSAT arguments often place conclusions there, though not always. Remember: conclusions are claims the author argues FOR, not just any claim stated.

Can background information ever play a logical role?

Background information typically doesn't play a direct logical role—it provides context without serving as a premise or conclusion. However, be careful: what seems like background might actually be a premise if it's used to support the conclusion. The test is whether removing it would weaken the argument. If removing a statement would leave the argument intact (just with less context), it's background. If removing it would make the argument weaker or incomplete, it's playing a logical role. For example, "The study was conducted in 2020" might be background unless the argument relies on the recency of the study as evidence.

How do I handle arguments with multiple conclusions?

Some arguments have multiple conclusions in a chain, but there's still typically one MAIN conclusion that the argument is ultimately designed to establish. The main conclusion is the endpoint—everything else supports it. Other conclusions in the chain are intermediate conclusions. To identify the main conclusion: (1) Look for which conclusion is supported by everything else but doesn't itself support another claim. (2) Ask "What's the author's ultimate point?" (3) Check which conclusion comes last (though not always reliable). When the question asks about a statement's role, determine its relationship to the MAIN conclusion, not just any conclusion in the argument.

What does "plays no logical role in the argument" mean?

A statement plays no logical role when it doesn't contribute to the argument's reasoning structure—it neither supports the conclusion, nor is it the conclusion, nor does it represent an opposing view being refuted. This is rare but appears occasionally. For example, if an argument about economic policy includes a sentence like "The economist won the Nobel Prize in 2019," and this fact about the prize isn't used as evidence for any claim, it plays no logical role. It's merely an aside or tangential fact. Be very careful before selecting this type of answer—make sure the statement truly doesn't connect to the reasoning and isn't subtle background or context.

How can I improve my speed on role questions?

Speed comes from pattern recognition and systematic analysis: (1) Practice identifying conclusions quickly—spend focused time on just finding conclusions in many arguments. (2) Before reading, mark the statement the question asks about so you focus on it immediately. (3) Create mental templates for common argument structures (simple premise-conclusion, chain with intermediate conclusion, opposing view refutation). (4) Use the "because-therefore" reconstruction technique routinely until it becomes automatic. (5) Make strong predictions before looking at answer choices—this prevents you from being distracted by wrong answers. (6) Do untimed practice until accuracy is consistent, then gradually add time pressure. Role questions can be completed in 60-90 seconds once you master structural analysis.

What's the difference between a concession and an opposing view?

This is a critical distinction. An OPPOSING VIEW is a position the author REJECTS as false or incorrect. The author says "X claims Y, but Y is wrong because Z." A CONCESSION is a point the author ACCEPTS as true but argues doesn't undermine the main conclusion. The author says "X may be true, but my conclusion still stands because Y." Look for these signals: Opposing view markers include "However, this view is mistaken," "But this is false," "This overlooks..." Concession markers include "Admittedly," "While it's true that," "Although X is the case..." The key difference: with a concession, the author grants the truth of the claim; with an opposing view, the author denies it.

Do role questions appear on every LSAT?

Yes, role questions appear consistently on the LSAT, though they're less common than question types like strengthen, weaken, or assumption questions. Expect approximately 4-6 role questions across both Logical Reasoning sections, or about 2-3 per section. While they represent only about 4-6% of Logical Reasoning questions, they're considered high-value questions because they follow predictable patterns once you understand argument structure. Many test-takers find them to be reliable point opportunities after practicing structural analysis. The skills you develop for role questions—identifying conclusions and mapping argument structure—also benefit your performance on virtually every other Logical Reasoning question type.

Key Takeaways for Success

Essential Principles to Master

  • Function Over Content: Focus on what a statement DOES in the argument, not what it SAYS. The same content can play different roles in different arguments.
  • Main Conclusion First: Always identify the main conclusion before analyzing other statements. Everything else's role is defined by its relationship to the main conclusion.
  • Map the Structure: Visualize the argument as a structure with supporting beams (premises) leading to a roof (conclusion), possibly with intermediate levels (subsidiary conclusions).
  • Use Diagnostic Tests: Apply the "Why should I believe that?" test for support relationships and the dual support test for intermediate conclusions.
  • Mark Before Reading: Identify the statement the question asks about before you begin reading the stimulus. This focuses your attention.
  • Predict Strongly: Categorize the statement's role in simple terms before looking at answer choices. Don't let complex answer language confuse you.
  • Track Multiple Voices: When arguments present opposing views, carefully distinguish the author's position from others' views.
  • Practice with Official Materials: Use LSAC PrepTests through LawHub and Khan Academy to ensure authentic practice with real LSAT argument structures.

Master LSAT Argument Structure Analysis

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📊 PROGRESS TRACKING:Keep a role question analysis log. For each practice question, note: (1) the correct role, (2) how you identified it, (3) what made wrong answers incorrect. After 15-20 questions, review your log to identify patterns in your thinking. Are you consistently confusing premises with intermediate conclusions? Misidentifying opposing views? This targeted analysis reveals exactly where to focus your improvement efforts and accelerates mastery of structural analysis.

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