5.4 Logic Traps Under Time Pressure
Key Takeaways
- Timed logic errors usually come from rushing past a qualifier, not from failing to understand the topic.
- Affirming the consequent treats the result as proof of the trigger; it is invalid unless the rule makes the result exclusive.
- Answers with always, never, all, only, and must need exact support from the rule.
- A quick reset routine can recover difficult items: rewrite the rule, mark the given fact, then eliminate unsupported strength.
Why Good Test Takers Miss Logic Items
Logic questions often use familiar workplace details: badges, files, supervisors, schedules, and applications. That familiarity is useful only if you stay loyal to the stated rules. The exam does not reward what normally happens in an office. It rewards what must follow from the rule.
Under time pressure, most mistakes are predictable. Candidates reverse arrows, overlook unless, treat some as all, or choose an answer because it sounds like sensible policy. These errors are avoidable when you use the same checking routine every time.
Common Logic Trap Table
| Trap | What It Looks Like | Why It Fails | Quick Fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| Affirming the consequent | If approved -> signed, signed -> approved | The result may have another cause | Ask whether Q can happen without P |
| Denying the antecedent | If late -> reviewed, not late -> not reviewed | Other triggers may cause review | Ask whether another rule could trigger Q |
| Overstating some | Some trained staff inspect, so all trained staff inspect | Some means at least one | Match the quantifier exactly |
| Ignoring unless | Unless ID is shown, badge denied | The rule must be rewritten | Use no ID -> no badge |
| Treating or as and | Urgent or before noon becomes both required | Either condition may be enough | Circle or, and, either, both |
| Adding outside facts | Managers usually have keys | The statement never said that | Use only given facts |
Strong Words Need Strong Proof
Words such as must, always, never, only, all, and none can be correct, but they need direct support. If a rule says a supervisor may review a file, an answer saying the supervisor must review it is too strong.
Weaker words such as may, can, some, and at least one are often safer, but they still need support. Do not choose a weak answer just because it sounds cautious. It must still follow from the facts.
The 20-Second Reset
When an item starts to feel tangled, stop rereading the story and reset the logic.
- Rewrite the rule in short form.
- Mark the given fact under the matching side of the rule.
- Decide whether you have direct rule, contrapositive, reverse, or no link.
- Cross out answers that add facts or use stronger language than the rule.
- If two choices remain, ask which one is guaranteed in every case.
This reset works for more than if-then questions. For ordering, rewrite the rules beside slots. For classification, rewrite category conditions in a table. For syllogisms, circle the quantifiers before reading the choices.
On a paper test, use compact marks rather than full sentences. Write A -> B, not B -> not A, or [C-D] for an immediate block. These marks reduce rereading and make it easier to notice a reversed or overbroad answer.
If the timer is tight, do not debate a favorite answer. Prove it from the rule or eliminate it. Unsupported answers often sound polished because they describe what an office might do, not what the problem proves.
Trap Example: Signed Does Not Mean Approved
Rule: If overtime is approved, the supervisor signs the timesheet. Fact: The supervisor signed the timesheet. The tempting answer is that overtime was approved. That is affirming the consequent.
The signature is required when overtime is approved, but the rule does not say overtime is the only reason a supervisor signs. The timesheet might need a routine weekly signature. The safest conclusion is that the signature alone does not prove approval.
Trap Example: Both Conditions Required
Rule: Keys may be released only after a license check and supervisor authorization are complete. If a clerk releases keys after the license check but before authorization, the clerk violated the rule.
Do not treat one completed condition as enough. The word and means both required conditions must be satisfied. If the rule had said license check or supervisor authorization, one would be enough. The exam often tests this difference.
Final Pacing Strategy
Answer easy deductions first. If a sequence has simple differences, solve it quickly. If an ordering problem has an immediate block, place the block. If a syllogism has all and no statements, check containment and separation.
If a problem takes too long, mark the most restricted information on paper and move through the choices one by one. A single violated rule is enough to eliminate a choice. You do not need to build every possible arrangement unless the question asks how many arrangements are possible.
Rule: If a record is legally exempt from public release, the coordinator marks it restricted. A record was marked restricted. Which conclusion is safest?
Some intake assistants speak Spanish. All Spanish-speaking staff receive a language differential. Which statement must be true?
Rule: Vehicle keys may be released only after both a license check and supervisor authorization are complete. A clerk released keys after a license check but before supervisor authorization. What error did the clerk make?