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Getting To Maybe: How to Excel on Law School Exams

Getting To Maybe: How to Excel on Law School Exams

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Total Reviews: 52

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A Solid Rhetoric for Law School Exams
A very thorough, explicit, step-by-step guide to what law school professors want to see on your written exams. Very lucid, sometimes even witty. Most law schools still adhere to the Socratic, sink-or-swim method, in which students are kept in the dark about what's expected of them. As a result, many students are totally flummoxed and panic-stricken when exam time rolls around. Be sure to read this book just before you head off to law school; then read it again a couple of weeks before your first exam. If you follow the authors' advice, you are practically guaranteed good grades. Hey, you might even make the Law Review. It worked for me.

Other good books to read before heading off to law school:
Law 101, by Jay Feinman
Introduction to U.S. Legal System, by William Burnham
Planet Law School, by "Atticus Falcon"
The first two give a nice overview of the whole subject and will help you tie everything together. The last is an overcynical but very amusing description of the kind of mind games you're likely to encounter; it also contains the best study tips I've seen.

Also: If you have the time and money, enroll in an intensive paralegal training course before law school. I did, and it really saved my ass during 1L.

Last but definitely not least: Spend at least six months prepping HARD for the LSAT. Work your way through a good logic textbook (I recommend Copi's), study a good prep book (e.g., Jeff Kolby's), and practice on as many real LSATs as you can, under time-pressured conditions. It really pays off.

2003-10-19
great purchase
I'm glad I bought this book.It gave me an understanding of legal reasoning and what law students go through.
2002-12-23
great purchase
I'm glad I bought this book because it gave me an appreciation of what is called legal reasoning and what goes through a lawyer's mind or a law student's mind.
2002-12-20
Avoid Commercial Outlines and Study Groups
Having graduated with high honors from one of the top five law schools, I relied on several of these books to identify the appropriate approach to taking law school exams. I applied the approach as follows: (1) read only those assignments provided by the professor (ignore commercial outlines, etc.); (2) take extensive notes of everything the professor says in class (and do not write down any student comments or student answers to Socratic questions); (3) organize your notes of the professor's lectures into your own outline; (4) read the professor's prior exam files, including any student answers selected by the professor as "model answers"; and (5) practice taking the professor's old exams in the few days leading up to exam day. The rationale is that your professor will be looking for you to spot those issues that he or she views as important. The more of these issues you spot, the higher your exam grade will be. Ditch those commercial outlines and study group meetings. In addition to Getting to Maybe, you should also prepare for law school by conditioning yourself to what its competition will feel like. Two excellent books that accomplish this goal are Scott Turow's One L (Harvard in the 1970s) and Scott Gaille's The Law Review (2002 book about competition at The University of Chicago Law School).
2002-10-28
Law School Exams
If you have already taken a few law school exams, or are about to take your first law school exam, this book will be extremely helpful. It is unlike any of the hornbooks or study aids out there. While it is not class specific, it will explain in clear and precise terms what you should do to understand the themes and concepts in all of your classes. It will enhance your understanding of why your professor went into one specific area and explain what you should have gotten out of the class so that you can be better prepared for the next class.
2002-09-17
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