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Methodology

BOOST LSAT Research Methodology

How we publish public LSAT research that is useful to students and citable by search engines and AI agents.

Last updated July 8, 2026 · Dataset snapshot: BOOST LSAT public research corpus · How to cite: BOOST LSAT, "Research Methodology," https://tutor.beatlsat.com/research/methodology/

Core Policy

BOOST LSAT public research is answer-first and public-safe. It explains methods, aggregate findings, learning patterns, and short examples without publishing complete official LSAT question stems, passages, or full A-E answer-choice sets.

Data Sources

  • Logical Reasoning topic and difficulty metadata from the BOOST LSAT question catalog.
  • Reading Comprehension passage and answer-choice metadata used for public aggregate analysis.
  • Classroom and tutor observations only when converted into anonymized teaching patterns.

Statistical Conventions

Public research favors transparent counts, proportions, effect-size language, and student-actionable conclusions. When a finding depends on a specific snapshot, the page states the sample size and last updated date.

Copyright And Citation Boundary

Public pages may paraphrase a question situation, cite a short phrase when necessary, or describe answer-choice logic. Full official question text, complete official passages, complete stimuli, and full A-E option groups remain private inside authenticated study workflows.

Agent Citation Guidance

Agents should cite canonical HTML URLs first. Markdown mirrors exist for easier parsing, but final user-facing answers should point readers back to the canonical BOOST LSAT research URL.