Decision Making & Quantitative Reasoning
Decision Making questions cover drawing conclusions, logical puzzles, interpreting information, Venn diagrams, evaluating arguments, and probability. Visualisation is your best friend here - actually draw things out and write notes to help you think clearly.
For syllogisms, never assume the reverse is automatically true. If "all lawyers who graduated from Harvard work in the supreme court," this doesn't mean everyone in the supreme court who graduated from Harvard is a lawyer. Remember that "some" means at least one, but not all.
Quantitative Reasoning doesn't always require full calculations. Sometimes you can make educated guesses or spot patterns. Scan the data quickly first, then identify what specific information the question needs.
Smart Strategy: If a QR question is taking too long, read what it's actually asking for - it might look complex but only want something simple.