LSAT Study Guide

Convert your LSAT prep materials into audio and build logical reasoning skills during commutes, walks, and daily activities.

Benefits

How It Works

  1. Upload LSAT prep materials — Upload your PowerScore Bibles, LSAT Trainer, or Manhattan Prep guides. VoiceBrief handles logical notation and argument structures.
  2. Focus on one section type — Generate audio reviews organized by question type: Logical Reasoning (strengthen, weaken, flaw), Reading Comp, and Logic Games strategies.
  3. Listen to concept explanations — Commute with argument structure reviews. Walk with conditional logic explanations. Exercise with reading comp strategies.
  4. Quiz on reasoning patterns — AI generates questions testing your ability to identify argument structures, flaw types, and valid inferences.
  5. Voice chat for explanations — Ask the AI to explain why a particular answer choice is correct, or walk through conditional logic chains.

Features

Recommended Study Schedule

Frequently Asked Questions

Can audio help with LSAT prep?
Audio is excellent for LSAT conceptual learning. Logical Reasoning relies on pattern recognition - hearing argument structures and flaw types repeatedly builds this skill. While you still need timed practice with actual questions, audio builds the conceptual foundation that makes practice more productive.
How does audio help with Logical Reasoning?
Logical Reasoning is about recognizing argument patterns quickly. Audio review of common structures (causal arguments, analogies, appeals to authority) trains your brain to spot these patterns automatically. Many 170+ scorers report that repeated exposure to concepts was key to their improvement.
Is audio useful for Logic Games?
Audio helps with Logic Games strategy and conditional logic concepts, but you'll still need visual practice for diagramming. Use audio to master the rules of conditional logic (contrapositives, biconditionals) and game type strategies, then practice diagramming at your desk.
How long should I study for the LSAT?
Most students study 3-6 months, 15-25 hours weekly. Audio adds 1-2 hours daily during otherwise unproductive time. This extra exposure to logical concepts makes a significant difference, especially in the early months when you're building foundational reasoning skills.

Related Study Guides

voicebrief.io - Featured on Startup Fame VoiceBrief badge VoiceBrief.io badge