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Why Studying in Law School is Different from Undergraduate, Graduate and Medical School
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Good study skills cannot be learned by trial and error. You
cannot study well or do well on exams, regardless of the amount of
time allotted for studying, unless you realize that your studying must
be specific to the tasks itself.
Mistaken beliefs about study
skills can get you into serious academic trouble for several reasons:
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Most law students have been able to cover up any study skill deficient
with intellectual ability. However, since law school is highly competitive,
natural ability alone will not always suffice.
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Most law classes stress "oral" performance BUT your grade in the class
will be based 100% on an analytical written exam performance. Furthermore,
there is no correlation between excellent classroom performance and exam
performance. Point Blank: Just because you seem to be doing well in class
does not mean you will do well on exams.
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Law has a form of communicating written analysis that is very specific
and must be learned independent from class preparation. Most students are
used to relying on preparing for class, memorizing and understanding the
material as a means of performing well. In law school you need to learn
to communicate your answer in written legal form--a skill that won't be
taught.
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In virtually all law school classes students receive essentially no feedback
regarding their individual performance and often their entire grade turns
on one final exam. If you have inadequate study strategies you will not
know it until you get your grade.
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In law school is unlike virtually any other kind of educational institution,
regarding class-work. The grades received in the first year are more important
than grades received later
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