Askiras Editorial Team
Askiras publishes short SAT and LSAT study guides meant to get a student from confusion to the next useful practice step quickly.
We do not treat these pages as content-farm inventory. The job of a guide is to explain a pattern clearly, show one worked move, and point the reader into practice while the idea is still fresh.
How we build guides
- Start with a real study decision: a question family, recurring trap, or review problem that students actually hit.
- Compress the explanation until the page teaches the move without padding the page to chase word count.
- Add an example, checklist, or comparison so the page is easy to cite and easy to use under time pressure.
- Link the guide into the matching Askiras drill or teaser flow so reading turns into practice, not passive browsing.
- Update the page when exam format assumptions, product flows, or the clearest explanation change.
What we optimize for
- Clearer language than test-prep boilerplate.
- Shorter pages than broad summary sites when the extra paragraphs do not help.
- Visible examples, not just abstract advice.
- Titles and intros that sound like a person teaching, not a template selling search traffic.
What we avoid
- Inflated article length used only to target keywords.
- Fake authority signals or copied explanations.
- Pages that stop at “what this is” without telling the reader what to do next.
Coverage
Right now the strongest clusters are SAT and LSAT under /learn/. They are built to support Askiras practice flows, but the guides are written to stand on their own if a student lands there from search.
Independence
Askiras is an independent study product. SAT is a registered trademark of the College Board, and LSAT is a trademark of LSAC. Those organizations do not endorse Askiras.