Methodology

How Kelsat questions are built — and what to trust them for.

We want you to know exactly what you're practicing on. Here's the straight answer.

What they are

Every Kelsat question is an original, LSAT-style item generated to match the published structure of a specific question type — Assumption, Weaken, Flaw, Inference, Main Point, Method, Parallel, Paradox, Strengthen, Must Be True for Logical Reasoning, and the standard Reading Comprehension question families.

Each item is constrained to a five-choice format with a single best answer, a stimulus or passage in the LSAT length range, and an explanation that points to the exact textual evidence behind the credited response.

What they are not

  • Not official LSAC items. The LSAT is owned and published by LSAC. We don't reuse their content.
  • Not human-reviewed before you see them. Items are generated on demand. A small fraction will be ambiguous, have a defensible second answer, or contain a wording slip.
  • Not difficulty-calibrated. Real LSAT items go through years of statistical equating. Ours don't — so a Kelsat score is a directional signal, not a predicted LSAT score.

What they're good for

  • Reps on question-type patterns. Drill 30 Assumption questions in a sitting — something you can't do with the finite supply of official PrepTests.
  • Pacing and stamina. Full timed tests let you practice 25-minute sections without burning a real PrepTest.
  • Diagnosing weak subtypes. The per-subtype breakdown on results points you at what to fix.

How we recommend using Kelsat

  1. Use official LSAC PrepTests for your scored diagnostics.
  2. Use Kelsat for unlimited drilling, subtype focus, and timed reps between PrepTests.
  3. Flag anything that feels off. We use reports to retire bad item patterns.
See a bad question?

Every question has a Report button. Use it. Reports are the fastest way we improve.