Logical Reasoning

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When targeted drills change how a section feels

Drills are not punishment—they are a way to shrink the search space when you recognize question stems faster.

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Why it matters

A short pattern of drills can change perceived difficulty before raw scores move—useful for students who need morale as much as metrics. Copy stays evergreen and non-specific to any single exam form.

Drills work because they narrow the world: fewer question types, fewer distractions, and faster feedback loops. When stems start to look familiar, you spend less working memory on decoding and more on the actual reasoning task.

That shift often shows up as “the section feels easier” before numbers move. That is not magical thinking—it is pattern recognition doing its job.

Pair drills with a simple log: what stem shape, what wrong answer type, and whether time was on or off. After a week, you should see whether drills deserve more calendar space or whether you need a different family.

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