LSAT
Wrong-Answer Trap4 min read

How to Spot the Reverses the Relationship Trap on the LSAT

When we flag an answer as Reverses the Relationship, it means there was a specific reason that wrong answer looked attractive. The answer flips the direction of a relationship or dependency in the text. This guide is about catching that move while the choice still feels tempting, then using review to make the pattern easier to notice next time.

What This Trap Means

The answer flips the direction of a relationship or dependency in the text.

In plain English, Reverses the Relationship means the answer is doing something that can feel relevant while still failing the job of the stem. The details change from question to question, but the review habit is the same: slow down, compare the choice to the exact task, and ask what it still fails to prove.

Example

Here is the pattern in a simplified LSAT-style setup. The topic will change, but the underlying move is the part you want to recognize.

Example

Setup: The stimulus says every certified inspector has completed advanced training.

Tempting wrong answer: Anyone who completed advanced training is a certified inspector.

Why it matters: That Reverses Relationship because the original claim runs from certification to training, not from training to certification.

Why It Feels Tempting

The answer preserves the same terms but swaps which side explains, supports, depends on, or follows from the other.

LSAT wrong answers are rarely random. They borrow real language from the stimulus, point at a nearby issue, or describe something that would matter in a different version of the question. That is why this pattern can feel reasonable in the moment even when it does not survive a strict check against the task.

How To Spot It

Use these checks before committing to the answer. The point is to make the suspicious move visible while you still have time to compare choices.

  • Watch for cause/effect, sufficient/necessary, premise/conclusion, and author/respondent reversals.
  • Diagram or paraphrase the relationship before reading choices.

How To Beat It

Do not treat the label as something to memorize. Treat it as a cue for what to check next.

During review, find the exact word, comparison, scope shift, or support gap that made the answer tempting. Then rewrite the answer in your own words and state why it fails the stem. That turns the trap from a vague mistake into a repeatable signal.

  • Name the direction of the relationship out loud.
  • Reject answers that use the right nouns in the wrong order.

How To Review It In Your Diagnostics

If this pattern is showing up in your diagnostics, start with a small set of missed questions rather than trying to overhaul your whole approach. Look at the answer you picked, write down the feature that made it tempting, and then compare that feature to the reason the credited answer works.

Over time, the percentage matters less than the reaction it trains: pause, name the move, and force the answer back through the exact question stem.

Quick Check

Did this answer flip the relationship the passage gave me?