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Award-Winning LSAT Logical Reasoning Tutors serving Miami, FL

Certified Tutor
7+ years
Viraj
I'm a 2nd year medical student at the University of Miami. I have extensive experience tutoring in all science subjects (orgo, biology, genetics, physics), math and reading. I have been an SAT and ACT tutoring for over 6 years now at the local Boys and Girls Club. I also have extensive experience tu...
University of Miami
Bachelor of Science, Biology, General
University of Miami Miller School of Medicine
Doctor of Medicine, Biology, General

Certified Tutor
9+ years
Derek
I am currently a Harvard student majoring in Computer Science with a minor in Applied Mathematics. I graduated Class Valedictorian in high school and was named National Merit Finalist. I took 16 AP classes in high school, including AP Calculus AB, AP Calculus BC, AP Computer Science A, AP Physics C ...
Harvard University
Bachelor in Arts, Computer Science
Certified Tutor
9+ years
Lance
I am a 22-year-old medical student. In college, I triple majored in Theoretical Mathematics, Computer Science, and Chemistry. My tutoring experience includes over a dozen classes where I was a TA or grader, many of which involved me teaching classes independently. I am looking forward to tutoring ha...
University of Miami
Bachelor of Science, Mathematics and Computer Science
University of Miami
Doctor of Medicine, Community Health and Preventive Medicine
Certified Tutor
9+ years
Veena
I'm Veena and I recently graduated from the University of Miami with a B.S. in Microbiology and Immunology with Chemistry and English Literature as my minors. I've tutored at a Math and Reading learning center in high school and became an employee of the Academic Resource Center at UM where I tutore...
University of Miami
Bachelor of Science, Microbiology and Immunology
Certified Tutor
Max
I am a graduate of the public history program at the University of South Carolina, where I received an M.A. I am pursuing a career in historic preservation, because buildings and structures crucial to maintaining the culture of local and national society are constantly threatened. Throughout my grad...
University of South Carolina
Masters, Public History
New College of Florida
Bachelors, History
Certified Tutor
10+ years
Nicolas
I'm an undergraduate at Princeton University working toward a degree in Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, with the Sustainable Energy Certificate.
Princeton University
Current Undergrad, Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering
Certified Tutor
6+ years
Michelle
I am a current undergraduate student at Duke University seeking a major in neuroscience and a possible minor in literature or chemistry. I have been tutoring higher level courses since the beginning of high school, and although I tutor in a variety of subjects, I specialize in writing, English, and ...
Duke University
Bachelor of Science, Neuroscience
Certified Tutor
6+ years
Veronica
I am a second year Computer Engineering student at the University of Florida. I have experience working for Mathnasium tutoring students from kindergarten through high school. I love tutoring math as it has always been my favorite subject and I really enjoy the problem solving aspect of the subject.
University
Bachelor's
Certified Tutor
My tutoring sessions are interactive, patient, and highly personalized. I don't believe in a one-size-fits-all methodeach student learns differently, so I adapt my approach to match their individual pace, goals, and learning style. I focus on helping students truly understand the why behind each con...
Johns Hopkins University
Bachelor's
Certified Tutor
9+ years
Michelle
Centenary College of Louisiana
Bachelor of Science, Biology, General
Certified Tutor
8+ years
Dalila
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Bachelor of Science, Mathematics
Certified Tutor
5+ years
I am a rising senior majoring in civil engineering at the University of Florida (UF). I graduated from Coral Gables Senior High School, with an International Baccalaureate (IB) diploma, where I had many teachers that I admired and looked up to. The wonderful experiences I had with my teachers in hig...
University
Bachelor's
Certified Tutor
Manuela
I am Pre-Med but majored in Romance Languages and Literatures. I was born in Colombia and speak Spanish at home. I studied abroad in France junior year of high school and in Chile junior year of college, and my experience abroad really strengthened my passion for languages and other cultures.
Washington University in St. Louis
Bachelor of Science, Romance Languages
Washington University in St. Louis
Major in Romance Languages and Literatures
Certified Tutor
6+ years
I'm now an undergraduate at the University of Florida and I'm seeking a Bachelor's in Mathematics and a Doctorate in Pharmacy.
University
Bachelor's
Certified Tutor
I am extremely passionate about psychology, but I also really enjoy tutoring English. Literary analysis can be fun, I promise! When I am tutoring a student, I try to relate to him or her on a more friendly and personal level; it is important to me that my students understand I am accessible and ther...
University
Bachelor's
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Frequently Asked Questions
Score improvement depends on your starting point and commitment level, but most students see meaningful gains within 8-12 weeks of focused work. Many students improve by 4-7 points on the Logical Reasoning section by mastering question types, refining their approach to argument analysis, and building speed through targeted practice. Personalized 1-on-1 instruction is particularly effective for Logical Reasoning because tutors can identify your specific weak spots—whether it's flaw identification, strengthen/weaken questions, or conditional reasoning—and create a custom study plan around those gaps rather than generic test prep.
Most test-takers have 35 minutes for 25 questions in each Logical Reasoning section, which means roughly 1.5-2 minutes per question. The key is not rushing through easy questions to "save time" for hard ones—that backfires. Instead, develop a consistent process: read the stimulus actively (underline the conclusion), identify the question type, apply that question type's strategy, then evaluate answer choices methodically. Tutors can help you find your optimal pace through timed practice, showing you which question types you should tackle first and which ones to flag and return to if time allows. This personalized pacing strategy matters more than raw speed.
The LSAT tests roughly 10-12 question archetypes across both Logical Reasoning sections: Flaw, Strengthen, Weaken, Necessary Assumption, Sufficient Assumption, Main Point, Inference, Method of Reasoning, Parallel Reasoning, and a few others. Each type requires a different analytical approach. For example, a Flaw question asks you to spot the logical error in an argument, while a Strengthen question asks what would best support that same argument. Mastering these question types is essential because once you recognize the pattern, you know exactly what to look for in the answer choices. Personalized tutoring focuses on drilling your weakest question types until they become automatic.
The biggest mistake is choosing an answer that "sounds right" without checking it against the specific question stem. For instance, students often pick an answer that strengthens an argument when the question asks what assumes the argument—two very different tasks. Other frequent errors include: misidentifying the conclusion (confusing supporting premises for the main point), falling for trap answers that are too extreme or out of scope, and not reading all five choices before selecting one. Additionally, many students rush through the stimulus, missing nuance in the argument's logic. A tutor can help you slow down strategically, recognize these patterns in your own practice, and build habits that prevent them on test day.
Start by taking a full, timed practice test under realistic conditions, then review your performance by question type rather than just by overall score. You'll quickly see if you're missing more Assumption questions than Inference questions, for example. Next, analyze your errors: did you get it wrong because you misread the stimulus, didn't understand the question type, eliminated the right answer, or ran out of time? These patterns reveal whether your issue is foundational understanding, question-type recognition, or pacing. Personalized tutoring makes this diagnostic process faster and more accurate—a tutor can pinpoint your weak areas in just a few sessions and design a focused study plan to address them, rather than you spending weeks guessing at what to drill.
Most LSAT prep experts recommend completing at least 50-70 full-length practice tests before test day, with your final 10-15 tests taken under actual testing conditions (timed, in sequence, with no breaks outside the official schedule). However, what matters more than the number is how you review them. After each test, spend 2-3 hours analyzing every single question you missed—not just the Logical Reasoning sections, but drilling into why you chose wrong answers and what the correct reasoning was. Quality review of 30 tests beats mindless completion of 70. A tutor can accelerate this process by identifying which tests and sections to prioritize for your study level, helping you review efficiently, and catching patterns in your mistakes that you might miss on your own.
Test anxiety during Logical Reasoning often stems from feeling uncertain about your approach or running low on time. The best antidote is confidence built through repeated, successful practice. When you've solved a Flaw question correctly dozens of times using the same clear process, you walk into the test knowing your method works—that familiarity calms anxiety. Additionally, develop a brief mental routine: take a breath before reading the stimulus, trust your process, and remember that not every question is solvable in under two minutes—flagging a tough question and moving on is a strength, not a weakness. Working with a tutor helps you build this confidence faster by providing realistic feedback, creating a structured study plan you can trust, and practicing test-day simulation so nothing on the actual LSAT feels surprising.
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