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Editorial How Askiras guides are made

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

  1. Start with a real study decision: a question family, recurring trap, or review problem that students actually hit.
  2. Compress the explanation until the page teaches the move without padding the page to chase word count.
  3. Add an example, checklist, or comparison so the page is easy to cite and easy to use under time pressure.
  4. Link the guide into the matching Askiras drill or teaser flow so reading turns into practice, not passive browsing.
  5. 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.