OK, 1Ls: you're probably exhausted right now. You're working on your Legal Writing papers--which to many of you will feel as if you're writing in another language, on another planet--and you're starting to outline your first-semester courses. You feel as if you've been drinking from a fire hose with all of the information you've been learning. And you are starting to get heartburn / nightmares about finals. What should you be doing right now?
1. Legal writing matters. Don't blow off your Legal Writing papers, even if your school makes the course a pass/fail course. Legal writing = legal thinking, so for every minute that you spend drafting your papers, you're actually building your skills for exam-writing. Think of your papers as two-fers: fulfilling a course's requirements and learning step-by-step legal analysis, which is the skill that exams will be testing. Moreover, most legal employers now are bemoaning the execreble (look it up!) writing skills of baby lawyers. You'll be able to stand out later if you work hard on your legal writing skills now.
2. Outlines are a tool for answering exams; they're not an end in themselves. Our book gives you several different options for outlining your courses. There's not a single outline format that works best, and your professors aren't going to grade your outlines, so you need to figure out what type of outline will help you prepare for step #3.
3. Start taking practice exams. Yes, we know: you don't know "the law" yet. You haven't (a) started outlining or (b) finished outlining. But here's the point: MOST OF YOUR GRADES WILL BE BASED ON YOUR EXAM PERFORMANCE. You've never taken law school exams before, so you need to learn the skill set that exams require: issue identification, application of the facts in the hypo to the rules of law; ignoring red herrings; and prioritizing your discussion points to maximize your grade. (Yes, we have two chapters devoted to exam-taking.)
4. Prepare to be unprepared. Roughly two days after your courses end, you should STOP OUTLINING and start drilling for exams, even if you haven't finished your outlines. It's more important to find out what you don't know (by taking practice exams) and to build your exam skills (yep, by taking practice exams) than it is to finish your outlines.
5. Prepare to work in groups. Even if you prefer going solo during the semester, take practice exams with some of your law school colleagues. You'll see where your blind spots are--and get a feel for the many ways to write exam answers--if you compare notes on your practice exams.
6. EXERCISE. Then exercise some more. Exercise = reduced stress. Reduced stress = better exam performance.
This blog is a companion to our book, Law School Survival Manual: From LSAT to Bar Exam, which is designed to help you survive every part of the law school process, from choosing a school through graduating and taking the bar.
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Saturday, October 30, 2010
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
Bragging a bit on the law students at the William S. Boyd School of Law, UNLV.
I'm teaching the basic Professional Responsibility course this semester, and as part of the course, students sign up to present the day's material to the rest of the class. (Ideally, the participation does two things: (1) helps the presenting students really "own" that day's material, and (2) helps the rest of the class in its participation with the presenting students, on the theory that students won't want to let each other down.)
The students have absolutely knocked their presentations out of the park. They've interviewed lawyers, found film clips on point, made their own movies, drafted their own negotiation exercises, and come up with memorable ways to teach the material--all without the use of a traditional casebook. I'm exceptionally proud of the students in this class.
Here's just one example of what the students have used: today, they used this YouTube clip (here).
The students have absolutely knocked their presentations out of the park. They've interviewed lawyers, found film clips on point, made their own movies, drafted their own negotiation exercises, and come up with memorable ways to teach the material--all without the use of a traditional casebook. I'm exceptionally proud of the students in this class.
Here's just one example of what the students have used: today, they used this YouTube clip (here).
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