A complete system for turning every wrong RC answer into a predictable, fixable pattern — not a mystery.

Most LSAT students keep some kind of error log…
…but almost nobody keeps a useful one.

They write things like:

  • “Misread the passage.”
  • “Should’ve slowed down.”
  • “Tricked by inference.”

These notes don’t help.

A real RC error log has ONE purpose:

To reveal the pattern behind your mistakes so you can fix the root cause — not the symptom.

This guide gives you the exact log system Kingston Prep students use in our rolling 4-nights-per-week LSAT program. It diagnoses your errors in a way that actually transforms your performance.

Let’s build it.


THE 3–LAYER KINGSTON RC ERROR LOG

Every missed RC question falls into one (or more) of three layers:

  1. Passage Understanding Error
  2. Question-Type Error
  3. Answer-Choice Error

Your log needs to capture all three.

Here’s how.


LAYER 1: Passage Understanding Errors (Structure Problems)

These are the mistakes that happen before you even see the questions.

Common Passage-Level Errors

1. Misidentified the author’s view

Symptoms:

  • Main point wrong
  • Attitude wrong
  • Couldn’t tell if the author supported or criticized something

Fix:

  • Mark tone words
  • Label the author vs. others
  • Rehearse passages focusing ONLY on perspective

2. Lost the structure mid-paragraph

Symptoms:

  • Not sure how paragraphs related
  • Confusion about shifts
  • Had to reread large chunks

Fix:

  • Predict paragraph jobs
  • Do weekly structure-only passages
  • Limit marking to the 3 markers (attitude, contrast, nouns)

3. Over-focused on detail during reading

Symptoms:

  • Felt slow
  • Didn’t know the point of the passage
  • Couldn’t answer main point confidently

Fix:

  • Practice “job-based reading”
  • Spend less time on dense info, more on paragraph purpose

4. Understood the content but forgot it quickly

Symptoms:

  • Needed to revisit the passage multiple times
  • Couldn’t recall where information lived

Fix:

  • Commit to 3–6 word paragraph labels
  • Drill retrieval over recall
  • Practice mapping

Log Format for Layer 1:

Passage Problem: (pick 1–2)

  • Misread author view
  • Lost structure
  • Over-focused on detail
  • Weak paragraph labeling
  • Didn’t predict structure

Why it happened:
(short note about the moment it broke — e.g. “Science paragraph 2 overwhelmed me, chased mechanism details.”)


LAYER 2: Question-Type Errors

Most students think “I misunderstood the question.”
Not true — they misunderstood the type of question.

RC question types are consistent and predictable. Here are the main types and what your error log should track.


MAIN QUESTION TYPES & WHAT TO LOG

1. Main Point

If missed:

  • You probably misread author attitude or conclusion.

Log:

Error Type: Misidentified author’s main purpose

Fix:

  • Summarize the passage BEFORE reading answer choices.

2. Primary Purpose

If missed:

  • You confused what the author did vs. wrote about.

Log:

Error Type: Confused topic with purpose

Fix:

  • Rephrase purpose as a verb: “evaluate,” “describe,” “argue,” “challenge,” etc.

3. Author Attitude / Perspective

If missed:

  • You didn’t notice tonal signals.

Log:

Error Type: Missed tone word, misread emotion

Fix:

  • Highlight/underline evaluative language.

4. Paragraph Function

If missed:

  • You didn’t assign a clear job to the paragraph.

Log:

Error Type: No paragraph role label / unclear relationship

Fix:

  • Rehearse quick labeling drills.

5. Detail Questions

If missed:

  • You misremembered a fact OR mis-located it.

Log:

Error Type: Searched wrong paragraph

Fix:

  • Strengthen paragraph labeling, not memory.

6. Inference Questions

If missed:

  • You assumed beyond the text OR overlooked a qualified phrase.

Log:

Error Type: Added assumptions / ignored limiting language

Fix:

  • Practice “what MUST be true” vs. “what CAN be true.”

7. Analogy Questions

If missed:

  • You copied the topic, not the relationship.

Log:

Error Type: Matched surface features instead of logic

Fix:

  • Write down the abstract relationship first.

Layer 2 Log Format:

Question Type: (e.g. Inference)
Mistake Pattern: (e.g. Assumed extra info / missed qualifier)
Correct Process Was: (write the correct mental steps)


LAYER 3: Answer-Choice Errors

This is where precision matters. Every wrong answer choice you pick will reflect ONE of the following predictable traps.


THE 7 MAJOR RC ANSWER TRAPS (Log These)

1. Too Strong

Words like: all, any, always, entirely, must, never.
If the passage isn’t absolute, this is wrong.

Log as:

Trap: Extreme language


2. Too Weak

Sometimes the passage does take a strong stance — and the correct answer reflects that.

Log as:

Trap: Hedged when the author wasn’t


3. Half-Right, Half-Wrong

Starts true → ends false, or vice versa.
The most common RC trap in 2024–2025 tests.

Log as:

Trap: Mixed accuracy


4. Wrong Paragraph

True fact, wrong location, wrong context.

Log as:

Trap: Out-of-scope placement


5. Opposite Meaning

Passage says X, answer says anti-X.

Log as:

Trap: Polarity shift


6. True but Not Answering the Question

Painful, but common.

Log as:

Trap: Irrelevant truth


7. Out-of-Scope

Not discussed, not implied, not supported — even if it feels reasonable.

Log as:

Trap: Added assumptions


Layer 3 Log Format:

Chosen Wrong Answer Trap: (one of the 7)
Correct Answer Was Right Because: (one sentence explaining the logic)


HOW TO USE THE LOG EFFECTIVELY

Step 1: Review the Log Every 8–10 Passages

Patterns will jump out:

  • 70% of your misses come from 2–3 traps
  • Your biggest issue may be inference assumptions
  • Or paragraph structure
  • Or attitude
  • Or misreading strong/weak wording

Once the pattern is obvious, adjusting your approach becomes simple.


Step 2: Pair Error Logging With Passage Re-Read (Purpose Only)

This is crucial:

You never reread the passage word-for-word.
You reread ONLY for:

  • author view
  • structure
  • paragraph roles

If the mistake came from misreading, you correct the structure, not the details.


Step 3: Replicate the Fix Within 24 Hours

Mistake → Diagnosis → Correction → Same-day reinforcement.

Kingston students drill a “fix-it” passage every night.
That’s why their RC curve rises steadily instead of wobbling.


WHAT A COMPLETED KINGSTON RC ERROR LOG ENTRY LOOKS LIKE

Passage Problem: Lost structure in P2 (chased details)
Question Type Missed: Paragraph Function
Why Missed: Didn’t identify P2 as “establishing contrast theory”
Answer Trap Chosen: Half-right-half-wrong
Correct Answer Was Right Because: It captured the paragraph’s role, not the topic.
Fix Action: 5 structure-only passages this week

That’s all you need — and it works.


Why This System Works So Well for Kingston Students

Because our class meets 4 nights a week, students:

  • log errors immediately
  • get instructor feedback in real time
  • get personalized pattern analysis
  • practice the fixes the same night
  • drill multiple passages back-to-back
  • climb the timing ladder faster
  • eliminate repeating mistakes within days, not weeks

It’s the repetition + personalized correction that makes the error log powerful instead of theoretical.