Match the Structure: Master LSAT Parallel Reasoning Questions
Learn proven strategies to identify logical patterns, abstract argument structures, and ace parallel reasoning and parallel flaw questions on the LSAT Logical Reasoning section with official examples and expert techniques.
Match the structure questions, also known as parallel reasoning questions, are among the most distinctive and challenging question types in the LSAT Logical Reasoning section. These questions test your ability to identify the underlying logical structure or reasoning pattern in an argument and then recognize that same structure in a different argument with completely different content.
The Law School Admission Council (LSAC) includes parallel reasoning questions to assess a critical legal skill: recognizing that arguments with different surface content can follow identical logical patterns. In legal practice, attorneys must identify when precedent cases—though factually different—follow the same legal reasoning structure as current cases. This pattern-matching ability is fundamental to analogical reasoning in law.
What Are Match the Structure Questions
Match the structure questions present an argument in the stimulus and ask you to identify which answer choice follows the same logical pattern or reasoning structure. The challenge is ignoring the specific content (topics, subjects, examples) and focusing exclusively on the abstract logical form of the argument.
📌 Common Question Stems
For Parallel Reasoning (Valid Arguments):
- "Which one of the following arguments is most similar in its reasoning to the argument above?"
- "The pattern of reasoning in which one of the following arguments is most similar to that in the argument above?"
- "Which one of the following exhibits a pattern of reasoning most similar to that exhibited by the argument above?"
- "The reasoning above most closely conforms to which one of the following principles?"
For Parallel Flaw (Invalid Arguments):
- "The flawed pattern of reasoning in which one of the following is most similar to that in the argument above?"
- "Which one of the following contains flawed reasoning most similar to the flawed reasoning in the argument above?"
- "The reasoning in which one of the following arguments most closely parallels the flawed reasoning in the argument above?"
Two Types of Structure Questions
Type 1: Parallel Reasoning (Valid Patterns)
These questions present logically sound or neutral arguments and ask you to find another argument with the same valid reasoning structure. The logical pattern may be strong or weak, but it's not necessarily flawed.
Type 2: Parallel Flaw (Invalid Patterns)
These questions present arguments with specific logical flaws and ask you to find another argument that commits the same error. You must identify both the reasoning structure AND the specific flaw type.
Same Logical Structure ≠ Same Content
Arguments with identical reasoning patterns can have completely different topics, subjects, and examples
Official LSAC Example Analysis
Let's examine an official LSAT parallel flaw question from the Law School Admission Council to understand this question type in practice:
📚 Official LSAC Example (Question 10)
Stimulus: The Venetian Renaissance painter Vittore Carpaccio used sumptuous reds in most of his paintings. Since the recently discovered Venetian Renaissance painting Erato Declaiming contains notable sumptuous reds, it is probably by Carpaccio.
Which one of the following contains a pattern of flawed reasoning most similar to that in the argument above?
- Most Renaissance painters worked in a single medium, either tempera or oil. Since the Renaissance painting Calypso's Bower is in oil, its painter probably always used oil.
- In Italian Renaissance painting, the single most common subject was the Virgin and Child, so the single most common subject in Western art probably is also the Virgin and Child.
- Works of art in the Renaissance were mostly commissioned by patrons, so the Renaissance work The Dances of Terpsichore was probably commissioned by a patron.
- The anonymous painting St. Sebastian is probably an early Florentine painting since it is in tempera, and most early Florentine paintings were in tempera. ✓
- Since late-Renaissance paintings were mostly in oil, the Venetian late-Renaissance painter Arnoldi, whose works are now lost, probably painted in oil.
Step-by-Step Structure Analysis
Step 1: Identify the Conclusion and Evidence
- Conclusion: The painting Erato Declaiming is probably by Carpaccio
- Evidence 1: Carpaccio used sumptuous reds in most of his paintings
- Evidence 2: Erato Declaiming contains sumptuous reds
Step 2: Abstract the Logical Structure
Abstract Pattern (The "Kirkland Method")
Original Argument:
Artist A used characteristic X in most of his works
This newly discovered work has characteristic X
Therefore, this work is probably by Artist A
General Abstract Form:
Most B are A
C is A
∴ C is probably B
Step 3: Identify the Flaw
🚫 The Logical Flaw
Flaw Type: Reverse Conditional / Affirming the Consequent
Why it's flawed: The argument states that most of Carpaccio's paintings have sumptuous reds, which means:
Carpaccio → (probably) Sumptuous Reds
But the argument concludes backwards:
Sumptuous Reds → (probably) Carpaccio
This ignores the possibility that many other painters also used sumptuous reds. The characteristic isn't unique to Carpaccio, so finding it in a painting doesn't prove Carpaccio painted it.
Step 4: Match to Answer Choice D
Answer D Structure:
Evidence: Most early Florentine paintings were in tempera
Evidence: St. Sebastian is in tempera
Conclusion: St. Sebastian is probably an early Florentine painting
Abstract Form:
Most B are A
C is A
∴ C is probably B
Same Flaw: Assumes that because most early Florentine paintings used tempera, any tempera painting is probably early Florentine—ignoring that many other schools and periods also used tempera.
Why Other Answers Are Wrong
- (A) Incorrect Structure: Concludes about what the painter "always" did, not about the painting's authorship. Different conclusion type.
- (B) Incorrect Structure: Reasons from Italian Renaissance to all Western art (part to whole), not from characteristic to creator. Completely different pattern.
- (C) Incorrect Structure: Uses "mostly" correctly—if most Renaissance works were commissioned, a Renaissance work probably was too. This is actually valid reasoning (not flawed).
- (E) Incorrect Structure: Concludes about what Arnoldi probably did based on what most painters in his time/place did. The direction is different—it's about the artist's likely practice, not identifying an unknown work's creator.
The Abstraction Process: Converting Content to Structure
The single most important skill for parallel reasoning questions is abstraction—the ability to strip away specific content and see only the underlying logical form. This requires systematic practice converting concrete arguments into abstract patterns.
The Kirkland Method for Abstraction
The Kirkland Method, named after LSAT instructor Nathan Fox, provides a systematic approach to abstracting arguments:
Identify Conclusion and Premises
Mark the conclusion and all supporting premises. Note conclusion indicators (therefore, thus, so) and premise indicators (since, because, for).
Replace Specific Terms with Variables
Substitute abstract placeholders (A, B, C) for all specific subjects, objects, and characteristics. "Carpaccio" becomes "B," "sumptuous reds" becomes "A," "Erato Declaiming" becomes "C."
Preserve Quantifiers and Modifiers
Keep words like "all," "most," "some," "probably," "definitely," "never"—these are crucial to the logical structure. Also preserve negations ("not," "isn't").
Write the Abstract Pattern
Express the argument in purely abstract terms, showing the logical relationships between your variables. This becomes your template for matching.
Note the Logical Form
Identify the type of reasoning: conditional, causal, analogical, statistical, etc. This helps recognize the pattern quickly in answer choices.
Abstraction Examples
Example 1: Conditional Reasoning
Concrete: "All doctors are educated. Sarah is educated. Therefore, Sarah is a doctor."
Abstract: All A are B
C is B
∴ C is A
Flaw: Affirming the consequent (Many non-doctors are also educated)
Example 2: Statistical Reasoning
Concrete: "Most accountants are detail-oriented. John is an accountant. Therefore, John is probably detail-oriented."
Abstract: Most A are B
C is A
∴ C is probably B
Valid: Correctly applies statistical generalization
Example 3: Causal Reasoning
Concrete: "Whenever it rains, the streets are wet. The streets are wet. Therefore, it rained."
Abstract: A → B
B
∴ A
Flaw: Affirming the consequent (Streets could be wet for other reasons)
Content (WHO/WHAT) → Structure (HOW)
Focus on the logical relationships (how premises connect to conclusion), not the subject matter
Strategy for Parallel Reasoning Questions
For questions asking you to match the reasoning pattern in logically sound or neutral arguments:
Identify the Conclusion Type
What kind of claim is the conclusion? Predictive? Causal? Comparative? Evaluative? The parallel argument must have the same conclusion type.
Count and Categorize Premises
How many premises? What types (factual, statistical, conditional)? The parallel must match the number and types of premises.
Abstract the Logical Form
Write the argument structure using variables (A, B, C) on your scratch paper. This becomes your matching template.
Note Quantifiers Precisely
"All," "most," "some," and "none" create different logical structures. The parallel must use the same quantifiers in the same positions.
Eliminate Systematically by Conclusion First
Read only the conclusion of each answer choice first. If the conclusion type doesn't match, eliminate immediately without reading the full argument.
Match Remaining Answers to Your Template
For answers with matching conclusions, check if the premises and logical connections match your abstract template.
✓ Matching Checklist
A true parallel must match ALL of these elements:
- Number of premises (2 premises → must have 2 premises)
- Type of conclusion (causal, predictive, evaluative, etc.)
- Quantifiers ("all," "most," "some," "none" in same positions)
- Strength of claim (definite vs. probable vs. possible)
- Logical connections (how premises relate to conclusion)
- Degree of certainty ("definitely," "probably," "might")
Strategy for Parallel Flaw Questions
For questions asking you to match a flawed reasoning pattern, you must identify both the structure AND the specific flaw type:
Identify the Flaw First
What's the logical error? Before abstracting the structure, name the flaw: circular reasoning, false dichotomy, false cause, affirming the consequent, etc.
Abstract the Flawed Structure
Create your abstract template, but focus specifically on WHERE the flaw occurs in the logical chain. This is the critical element to match.
Eliminate Answers with Different Flaws
This is the most efficient elimination strategy. If an answer commits a different type of flaw, it can't be parallel—eliminate it immediately.
Eliminate Valid Arguments
Any answer choice that presents logically sound reasoning (no flaw) cannot parallel a flawed argument. These are trap answers—eliminate them.
Match the Flaw's Position in Structure
The flaw must occur at the same point in the logical structure. If the original reverses a conditional between premises and conclusion, the parallel must do the same.
Common Logical Flaws on the LSAT
| Flaw Type | Description | Abstract Form |
|---|---|---|
| Affirming the Consequent | Assumes if A → B, then B → A | A → B, B, ∴ A |
| Denying the Antecedent | Assumes if A → B, then ¬A → ¬B | A → B, ¬A, ∴ ¬B |
| False Dichotomy | Assumes only two options exist when there are more | ¬A, ∴ B (ignoring C, D, E...) |
| Correlation ≠ Causation | Assumes correlation proves causal relationship | A & B occur together, ∴ A causes B |
| Circular Reasoning | Conclusion restates premise in different words | A, ∴ A (rephrased) |
| Ad Hominem | Attacks person instead of addressing argument | Person X is bad, ∴ X's claim is false |
| Hasty Generalization | Draws general conclusion from limited sample | Few A are B, ∴ All/Most A are B |
| Appeal to Authority | Assumes expert in one field is expert in another | Expert in X says Y, ∴ Y is true (X ≠ Y) |
⚠️ The "Valid Argument" Trap
33% of wrong answers on parallel flaw questions are logically valid arguments. Test makers know students often focus on structure while ignoring whether the reasoning is actually flawed. Always check: does this answer contain a logical flaw? If the reasoning is sound, it cannot parallel a flawed argument—eliminate it immediately.
Advanced Matching Techniques
Technique 1: Conclusion Elimination Strategy
Read ONLY the conclusion of each answer choice before reading full arguments. Eliminate any answer whose conclusion doesn't match the original's conclusion type. This can eliminate 3-4 answers in seconds.
📊 Conclusion Types to Match
- Causal: "X causes Y" or "Y results from X"
- Predictive: "X will happen" or "X is likely to occur"
- Evaluative: "X is good/bad" or "X should/shouldn't be done"
- Comparative: "X is better/worse than Y"
- Categorical: "X is a type of Y" or "X belongs to category Y"
- Probability: "X is probably/possibly/definitely true"
Technique 2: Quantifier Matching
Create a quantifier profile for the stimulus. If it has "Most A are B" and "Some C are A," the parallel must have parallel quantifiers in the same positions.
Quantifier Profile Example:
Stimulus:
P1: All A are B
P2: Most C are A
C: ∴ Most C are probably B
Required Match: Must have "All X are Y," "Most Z are X," and conclude "Most Z are probably Y"
Technique 3: The "Skeleton" Method
Write only the logical skeleton on your scratch paper, using symbols instead of words:
Skeleton Example
P1: A → B
P2: C → A
C: ∴ C → B
This transitive conditional structure is instantly recognizable in answer choices, allowing rapid elimination.
Technique 4: The One-Element-at-a-Time Scan
For complex arguments, check answer choices one element at a time:
- First pass: Check all conclusions (eliminate mismatches)
- Second pass: Check number of premises on remaining answers (eliminate mismatches)
- Third pass: Check quantifiers on remaining answers (eliminate mismatches)
- Fourth pass: Check logical connections on remaining 1-2 answers
This systematic approach is faster than analyzing each answer choice completely before moving to the next.
Technique 5: The "Same Flaw, Different Structure" Trap
For parallel flaw questions, beware answers that commit the same TYPE of flaw but with different logical structure. Both elements must match.
⚠️ Example of This Trap
Original: Affirming the consequent with conditional structure: A → B, B, ∴ A
Trap Answer: Also affirms the consequent, but with causal structure: "Whenever A, B occurs. B occurred. So A must have happened."
Same flaw type, but different logical forms (conditional vs. causal). Not a true parallel.
Time Management for Structure Questions
Parallel reasoning and parallel flaw questions are the most time-consuming questions in Logical Reasoning. Strategic time investment is critical:
⏱️ Timing Strategy
- Parallel Reasoning: 90-120 seconds (longest questions)
- Parallel Flaw: 80-110 seconds (slightly faster if you identify flaw quickly)
- Complex conditional parallels: Up to 120 seconds acceptable
- Simple statistical parallels: Can complete in 60-75 seconds
Strategic Decision: These questions appear only 1-2 times per Logical Reasoning section. Don't rush other questions to save time for these—allocate time based on question frequency and your strengths.
The Skip Strategy
Consider skipping parallel reasoning questions on your first pass if:
- You're struggling with time management overall
- The stimulus has 4+ premises (very complex structure)
- You find these questions significantly harder than others
- You're aiming for a score below 165 (missing 1-2 parallel questions won't prevent this)
Return to skipped parallel questions after completing all other questions in the section. With remaining time and pressure reduced, you can invest the 90-120 seconds these questions require.
⚠️ When NOT to Skip
If you're scoring 168+, you need very high accuracy across all question types. At this level, skipping any question type puts your target score at risk. Master parallel reasoning questions through deliberate practice rather than avoidance.
How to Practice Parallel Reasoning Questions
These questions reward systematic practice with structure identification. Follow this progressive approach:
Phase 1: Abstraction Skill Building (Week 1-2)
- Isolate 20 parallel reasoning questions from official PrepTests
- Practice untimed: Write complete abstractions on scratch paper
- Use the Kirkland method: Replace all content with A, B, C variables
- Verify your abstractions: Check if they accurately capture the logical structure
- Review official explanations: Compare your abstractions to expert analyses
Phase 2: Flaw Identification (Week 3-4)
- Focus on parallel flaw questions exclusively
- Practice identifying the flaw type before abstracting structure
- Create a flaw catalog: Note which flaw types appear most frequently
- Learn to spot "valid argument" traps: Eliminate these immediately
- Practice writing the flaw in your own words before looking at answers
Phase 3: Speed and Elimination (Week 5-6)
- Begin timing: Start at 120 seconds, gradually reduce to 90 seconds
- Practice conclusion-first elimination: Read only conclusions initially
- Use quantifier profiles: Create quick quantifier maps
- Track elimination efficiency: How many answers can you eliminate in 20 seconds?
- Do mixed practice: Parallel reasoning and parallel flaw together
Phase 4: Integration (Week 7+)
- Full Logical Reasoning sections: Practice with all question types mixed
- Develop skip/return strategy: When to skip parallels and return later
- Target accuracy: Aim for 70-80% accuracy (these are hard questions)
- Review every question: Even correct answers—strengthen pattern recognition
- Build confidence: Track improvement in speed and accuracy
📈 Mastery Indicators
- You can abstract arguments in 15-20 seconds
- You identify flaw types immediately for parallel flaw questions
- You eliminate 2-3 answers based on conclusions alone
- You complete questions in 90 seconds or less consistently
- You achieve 75%+ accuracy in timed practice
- You recognize common patterns (conditional, statistical, causal) instantly
Official LSAT Resources for Structure Questions
Use only official materials from the Law School Admission Council (LSAC) and authorized partners for practice:
Primary Official Resources
- LSAC Official Logical Reasoning Sample Questions - Free sample questions including parallel reasoning examples with official explanations
- LSAC Official LSAT Prep - Official preparation materials and study resources
- Official LSAT PrepTests - Published PrepTests with real, previously administered questions
- Khan Academy LSAT Prep - Free official LSAT preparation in partnership with LSAC (Note: transitioning to LawHub for tests after June 2024)
- LSAC Logical Reasoning Overview - Official information about Logical Reasoning section
Recommended PrepTest Range for Structure Questions
Focus on recent exams for current question styles:
- PrepTests 62-94: Most recent exams with current format and difficulty
- SuperPrep I & II: Official books with detailed explanations for every question
- 10 Actual, Official LSAT PrepTests: Collections of authentic exams
- PrepTest 52 and beyond: Comparative reading format (modern LSAT structure)
Parallel Reasoning Question Frequency
📊 Appearance Rate
Parallel reasoning and parallel flaw questions typically appear 1-2 times per Logical Reasoning section, making them relatively infrequent compared to assumption, strengthen, weaken, or inference questions. With two scored LR sections on your LSAT, expect to encounter 2-4 parallel questions total on test day.
Strategic Implication: While these are challenging questions worth mastering, their low frequency means missing one or two won't devastate your score. Prioritize higher-frequency question types (assumption, strengthen/weaken, inference) in your study plan while building competence with parallel reasoning.
⚠️ Why Official Materials Matter
Parallel reasoning questions are especially sensitive to quality. Unofficial questions often fail to match LSAC's precise logical structures and abstraction levels. Commercial test prep companies struggle to replicate the exact degree of structural parallelism LSAC requires. Always practice with official LSAC questions to learn authentic patterns. Use commercial resources for strategy instruction only, then apply those strategies to official materials.
Frequently Asked Questions
Test Day Strategy for Parallel Questions
✓ Quick Reference Checklist
For Parallel Reasoning:
- Identify conclusion and premises in stimulus
- Abstract to variables (A, B, C) preserving quantifiers
- Note the reasoning type (conditional, causal, statistical)
- Read only conclusions of answer choices first
- Eliminate non-matching conclusions immediately
- Match structure element-by-element for remaining answers
- Verify all elements (quantifiers, premises, connections) align
For Parallel Flaw:
- Identify the specific flaw type first
- Abstract the flawed structure showing where flaw occurs
- Eliminate valid arguments (these can't parallel a flaw)
- Eliminate different flaw types quickly
- Check remaining answers for matching flaw AND structure
- Verify the flaw occurs at the same structural point
- Confirm all elements match before selecting
Mental Framework for Success
🎯 The Right Mindset
- Content doesn't matter: Train yourself to ignore interesting topics and focus only on logical form
- Structure is everything: Two arguments about completely different subjects can have identical reasoning patterns
- Precision required: "All" vs. "most" or "definitely" vs. "probably" are structural differences that eliminate answers
- Time investment justified: These questions take longer—that's expected and acceptable
- Elimination is powerful: You can often eliminate 3-4 answers quickly, leaving careful comparison of only 1-2 options
- Practice pays off: Pattern recognition improves dramatically with volume—these questions become much easier after 40-50 practice questions
Common Traps to Avoid
- Content similarity trap: Choosing an answer because it discusses related topics rather than matching structure
- Incomplete abstraction: Failing to abstract fully and missing structural differences
- Quantifier blindness: Not noticing that "most" changed to "all" or "some"
- Valid flaw trap: Selecting logically sound reasoning when the stimulus is flawed
- Same-flaw-different-structure: Matching the flaw type but missing structural differences
- Conclusion rush: Selecting an answer with a matching conclusion without verifying premises match
Key Takeaways
Match the structure questions—including parallel reasoning and parallel flaw variations—test your ability to recognize that arguments with completely different content can follow identical logical patterns. Success requires systematic abstraction: stripping away specific subjects, topics, and examples to reveal the underlying reasoning structure.
The key insight is that logical form is independent of content. Whether an argument discusses Renaissance painters, early Florentine art, or any other subject, the same structural pattern can recur: "Most B are A, C is A, therefore C is probably B." This abstraction skill—translating content into structure—is precisely the pattern-matching ability required for legal reasoning, where precedent cases with different facts must be recognized as following the same legal logic.
Content → Variables → Abstract Pattern → Match → Verify All Elements
For parallel flaw questions, you must add an extra layer: identifying not just the structure but the specific logical error committed, then finding that same error embedded in a structurally identical argument. The most common trap—valid argument answers on parallel flaw questions—catches even experienced test-takers who focus on structure while forgetting to verify the flaw exists.
These questions are time-intensive by design, typically requiring 90-120 seconds. Their relative infrequency (1-2 per section, 2-4 total on test day) means they have limited score impact compared to higher-frequency question types. Strategic test-takers master the skill through deliberate practice but remain realistic about time allocation and the acceptable opportunity cost of occasionally missing these questions when time pressure mounts.
🎯 Your Action Plan
- Obtain official LSAT PrepTests from LSAC.org
- Isolate 30-40 parallel reasoning questions for focused practice
- Practice the Kirkland abstraction method on every question initially
- Build a catalog of common flaw types for parallel flaw questions
- Develop elimination strategies (conclusion-first, quantifier checking)
- Practice conclusion-only scanning to eliminate 2-3 answers quickly
- Track speed improvement from 120s → 90s per question
- Master identifying "valid argument" traps on parallel flaw questions
- Integrate into full-section practice once accuracy reaches 70-75%
- Decide whether to skip/return based on your target score and timing
With systematic abstraction practice using the Kirkland method, deliberate work on pattern recognition across 40-50 official questions, and strategic time management that acknowledges these questions' intensity and infrequency, you'll approach parallel reasoning and parallel flaw questions with confidence, recognizing logical structures instantly and matching them accurately under timed conditions.
