Skip to main
University-wide Navigation

From Getting to Maybe: How to Excel on Law School Exams, by Richard Michael Fischl and Jeremy Paul (Carolina Academic Press 1999). 

Tip #1: Exam preparation takes all semester

  • Regular class attendance is crucial to exam performance
  • The better your preparation for class, the more you’ll get out of class

Tip #2: Focus your exam study on your class notes

  • Most professors test what they teach
  • Your class notes can help you predict questions likely to appear on the exam

Tip #3: Prepare your own outline of the course

  • Law exams test rule application, not memorization
  • Commercial outlines are a poor substitute
  • Outlines prepared by other students are only marginally better

Tip #4: Review the professor's old exams

  • Go over old exams with a study group as often as possible
  • Simulate the exam experience at least once

Tip #5: Consider what questions you would ask

  • Identify the major issues covered in class, and the main points the professor made about them
  • Look for important cases pointing in opposite directions
  • Identify underlying conflicts, trends, and limits

Tip #6: Carefully read the exam instructions and follow them to the letter

  • If you have a question about the instructions, ask

Tip #7: Read each question carefully, and answer the question asked

  • Read each question at least twice
  • Avoid the "information dump" and don't B.S.

Tip #8: Organize and outline before writing your answer

  • Outlining keeps you focused on the main ideas
  • Outlining helps you think sequentially

Tip #9: Provide the reader with a brief roadmap

  • Create a strong first impression
  • Organize your own thoughts at the beginning and the end

Tip #10: Explain your reasoning

  • Explain the facts underlying your assumptions and conclusions
  • Explain to show what you're thinking
  • Explain to help your analysis

Tip #11: Draw conclusions when they're called for

  • Explain why you chose the result you did, and also why you rejected alternatives

Tip #12: Argue both sides

  • Consider each person's perspective
  • Seize on contradictory facts and tensions in the law

Tip #13: Stick to the facts and circumstances presented

  • Don't create new facts
  • Don't write treatises about the law

Tip #14: Remember who your "judge" is

  • Follow your professor's advice
  • Look for course themes

Tip #15: Watch time/credit allocations

  • When you're out of time on a question, force yourself to move on
  • When you must, provide an outline in lieu of a complete answer

Tip #16: Don't regurgitate legal rules and principles unless your professor wants you to

  • You get credit for applying hte law, not regurgitating it
  • An ounce of analysis is worth a pound of law

Tip #17: Don't repeat the facts

  • Use the facts to support your points
  • You get credit for analysing the facts, not for copying them

Tip #18: Don't be conclusory

  • Be wary of conclusory terms like "it is obvious that" or "clearly"
  • Don't say what, say why
  • Always anticipate counter arguments

Tip #19: Avois disquisitions on topics outside the course

  • Know your topics well, and use your syllabus as a guide
  • You can't afford to waste time

Tip #20: Don't leave your common sense at the door

  • If rote application of a rule would lead to an absurd result, question the application
  • Distinguish what the law "is" from what the law "ought to be"
pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy