Don’t wait to take practice tests!

Bar Review outlines are only as useful as you make them.  They do not come into the exam.  Only what is in your brain comes into the test site.  So, use the outlines now to help you learn, along with lectures, flashcards, flowcharts, and other learning tools. And, remember, the best way to learn law is to put it into practice!  So, be sure to be completing daily MBEs and MEEs and weekly MPTs.

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It’s a long way till February. Don’t burn out!

You are perfectly normal if you think, “I cannot handle any more studying.  Not another lecture or practice test.  I need to sleep.  I need a day off.  I need my life back!” You will have your life back after the bar. For now, another day of this is precisely what you must do. And another, and another.  You must remain motivated, batteries fully charged, util the last “time” is called on the last day of your exam.

How to maintain motivation?   It’s not easy.   But these ten steps help.

1) Exercise to burn off stress

Burn off the stress. Do something active every single day if you are able.  Walking, yoga, biking, swimming, weight lifting, jogging, spinning, skating.  Don’t skip a day.  Think of time exercising as an investment in your success.  And, if you want, study while on a treadmill or walk while playing a bar review lecture.

2) Pace yourself – one day at a time

Take breaks.  Remember even during the bar, you get close to a 2 hour lunch break between the morning and afternoon sessions.  So, feel free to take lunches now.  Stop fully and relax.  Eat something healthy. Drink water. Then get back into it.  And, when you’ve put in a full day of studying, take off, relax, then get a good night’s sleep.

3) Reward Yourself –daily and weekly.

Do something kind to acknowledge each day’s work. And, give yourself a bigger treat to mark the end of each week of hard work.  

4) Plan an after-bar something special

Schedule something as soon as possible after the exam, something you really look forward to.  Just thinking about that and knowing that you have something planned will help alleviate some of the burnout today.  

5) Shake up your study routine.

If you are tired of reading quietly, read aloud to yourself.  One of my students found the way to keep motivated (and better retain the material) was to read aloud in a funny accent and record her voice reading rules.  She played them back to herself  while driving and laughed while learning.

Try charting, try flashcards, try re-typing sample answers. Explain the rules/theories you are most afraid will be tested on the bar exam to a non-lawyer person.  (If you can explain something correctly to someone else, likely that means you have mastered it.)

Study in a different location one day. Variety can go a long way to helping stop burnout before it drags you down.  

6) Get on bar standard time

Complete practice days where you are “on” during the times you will have to be on during your bar exam. This will help you train the endurance needed for success.

7) Be kind to yourself.

This IS one of the hardest times in your life, one of the steepest mountains you will climb.  Once you pass, it’s a lifetime license.  You never have to do it again. 

8) Sing

Sing a favorite song. Music is a healthy, natural way to re-charge.

9) Check in with a classmate

If you study effectively with others, it might help to have some company. If not, at least reach out to classmates. There is no one who will understand what you are going through better. Even a quick phone call, text, or Zoom can help you feel that you are not alone. You are all in this together.

10) Eat chocolate!  It won’t add brain cells, but it should put a smile on your face!

For 1L Students

#Contracts #LawStudents #1L
Step-by-Step Guide to Contracts -an interactive workbook designed to effectively prepare students to pass exams. The most heavily tested legal rules are presented in a format that mirrors the way they arise as issues in typical testing fact patterns. Rule statements are set out in easy-to-memorize statements, with a breakdown of the element components and logical steps to take to apply new facts to each legal element. Fluency with the legal terminology is also essential to exam success, so this Step-by-Step Guide includes fill-in-the-blank spaces to help you learn and memorize definitions of key terms as they are introduced, and a glossary of selected terms at the end for further reference. In addition to learning the law and memorizing key rules and terms, success in law school also requires the hard work of deep learning, engaging with problems to test your own knowledge, and working toward gaining a strong command of all testable topics. To that end, this Guide contains short-answer Test Yourself questions. Working through these questions and then reading the answers and explanations to determine where your understanding is clear and where you must do additional work will help you master the skill of applying the relevant rules to new and different fact patterns. In addition to the short-answer questions, this Guide also includes numerous full-length essay questions with sample answers —providing further practice to test your knowledge and deepen your learning.
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About 50% of Contracts MBEs will focus on contract formation and defenses to enforceability. Are you ready?

#Contracts #barexam #lawstudents Step-by-Step Guide to Contracts

Read the MBE Subject Matter Outline for all MBE tested topics. In Contracts, the main categories of questions focus on:

I.Formation of contracts

II.Defenses to enforceability

III.Contract content and meaning

IV.Performance, breach, and discharge

V.Remedies

VI.Third-party rights

“Approximately half of the Contracts questions on the MBE will be based on categories I and IV, and approximately half will be based on the remaining categories—II, III, V, and VI. ” https://www.ncbex.org/pdfviewer/?file=%2Fdmsdocument%2F226 at page 3.

Merry Christmas!

To all who celebrate, a very Merry Christmas. Take today off and enjoy, as safely as possible with family and friends. Then, February takers, back to studying for the exam! This is your season of focused study. You owe that to yourself. Don’t get distracted. The world needs you as a licensed attorney. Put your energies there. Block out everything else, to the extent you can. Thinking about you and sending you all the best!

8 Weeks and Counting to Bar Success

For many law school graduates, eight weeks from tomorrow is your bar exam. Are you ready? Have you cleared your calendar and said No to everyone trying to take your time away from studying.

Remember the bar exam is a marathon, not a sprint. Get started today. And, if you need a break and some motivation, check out the audio recording of Bar Exam Success: A Comprehensive Guide on your West Academics platform or at the West Academics store, from Amazon, or from the ABA bookstore.