Sunday, January 24, 2016

Bar Prep Debate

There always seems to be the big debate about who has he best Bar Prep Program.  Barbri is usually the King of Bar Prep Programs, I mean that is what they built their company around so it makes sense that they have a great success rate and are heavily promoted at law schools.  Kaplan is making huge strides and catching up to law school students who wish to have a Bar Prep program but don't want to spend as much as the Barbri program.
I have used both I can tell you a few differences.
Kaplan offers unlimited (meaning limited only to the prompts they have) graded essays.  If you feel essay writing is your weakness this might be a good option.
Kaplan's multiples are harder, and more closely aligned to the MBE difficulty level.  Barbri didn't throw you softballs all the time, but they had a decent mix of easy to hard, Kaplan basically just had the hard one.  The Kaplan logic was that if you only work on the hard ones you will do better on the easy ones.
Barbri claims that 100% of the people that complete at least 75% of the Bar Prep Program pass the bar.
Barbri has AMP for the areas that you are not doing so great in, meaning extra work on Blackline law and multiples on just the blackline reading/work.

After doing both programs and listing to my friends who used AmeriBar or other programs here is what I think the biggest take away is.
YOU MUST DO A BAR PREP PROGRAM - and I don't mean pay for it and then do the minimum work, you have to actively study and be engaged when doing bar prep.  The reason bar prep programs work is that you are following a plan to cover all the key areas, learn local distinctions, and are practicing essays and multiple choice questions.

I was told that if you do 2,000 multiple choice questions and read why answers are correct your chances of passing increase by 20%.  This indicates that if you do the three products below you increase your chance of passing by 20%.
   

So what is the bottom line for the Great Bar Prep Debate - find a program that works to how you learn and commit to doing the entire program and try and hit 2000 multiple choice questions.  That is the only way you will pass, by studying and doing the work to learn what you need for the Bar Exam, because sadly law school does not teach you every single thing you need for the bar exam, and even if it did you would have to memorize if for 3 years.  It is easier to review and learn new material - so make sure you study.

Wednesday, January 20, 2016

Snow Days

When Snow Days happen in law school it is a time of joy and dread.
Joy because you know you will have extra time to study, read, outline, and not be in class and dread for almost the same reasons.  Plus, you may also have to make up the class time.  If you are nice your professors can be good sports and use something like a CALI exercise.

I often found Snow Days great to catch up and try and get ahead in readings and outlining.  For those who are facing the same possibility of snow days the next few days may a I make a few suggestions.

1. doing some reading - you will thank yourself if you get even one or two cases ahead
2. doing some outlining - you will thank yourself if you start now even if it is only the second or third week in the semester
3. maybe make some flashcards - yes even if it is only the second or third week in the semester a few cards here and a few cards there mean more review and less time making them at the end of the semester
4. take a break and watch a movie - I loved being a student and getting Amazon Prime at the student rate, with a free trial (great to watch movies while studying or taking a break).

5. Spend a few minutes outside enjoying the snow fall and living in the moment.

Sunday, January 10, 2016

Spring Semesters

As classmates return to class I want to point out that law school spring semester has a few differences than the fall semester (this is especially important for 1Ls)

1. You may be in a second part of a class (Torts, Civ Pro, Property, Contracts, Constitutional Law, etc.).  This means that you will continue to learn about the same topic, BUT will not review all that was learned in the fall semester..
     -DO NOT waste time on exams reciting details form concepts you learned and covered in the fall.     -DO mention concepts on the exam, but don't go into details
     -DO remember concepts, just because Torts 1 is don't forget it
    -DO keep those notes handy, but you don't need to review them for exams.
2. I suggest that you get two binders (about 1 1/2" wide) one for each semester
     -Put material from Property 1 in the first binder and then keep it out on a bookshelf in the Spring
     -Put material from Property 2 in second binder and keep that with you for studying
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3. Flashcards from Civ. Pro. 1 can be stored, but keep them handy in case you need to review a concept.
    -Flashcards should also be stored and saved so that you can use them for review at Bar time
     -Consider premade flashcards that you can add notes to (great to add state specific items

***Something link Critical Pass Flahscards can help with both classes and MBE bar prep***
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4. At some point during the semester, you will realize the weather is nice and you want to study outside or read outside.  DO IT!  Don't confine yourself to only studying inside, unless you are allergic to the outdoors, being outside is important.  You get Vitamin D from the sun, and more importantly it helps you relax and destress.  Research has show that blood pressure can drop just from being outside and looking at nature.
5. If it is your first semester, have an idea of what your GPA is and then figure out what the absolute worst you can do on all your exams is without dropping to a 2.0 or lower.  It sounds counter-intuitive, but knowing how bad you can perform and stay in law school actually helps.  I realized that I could get an F on one exam, and other than the headache of trying to retake the class I would still be able to stay in law school, and more realistically that I could get a D in Torts (my hardest class) and still be fine if I got a B in Legal Writing and Research (which was my strongest).
6. If it is your last semester, realize that you can't fail a class that is required to graduate or that you need the credits to reach your minimum required credits to graduate.  HOWEVER, you don't need to knock it out of the park either.  You need to pass your classes to graduate, but they will not drop you out of law school if you somehow end up getting a D in every single one of your classes your last semester.  Please try and pass, but realize it doesn't have to be a wow knock it out of the park grade.

Consider getting Amazing Prime for Students, because you can get supplies (like index cards or flashcards above) and prep material with free 2 day shopping.  Also, you will benefit from the video and music access during bar prep time.


Monday, October 5, 2015

Marbury v. Madison

A Constitutional Law Landmark Case that helped establish Judicial Review and that Congress cannot tell the Supreme Court how to decide cases.  C-SPAN did a 90 minute show on Marbury v. Madison.

Seeing the original writing and watching the show really helps you understand this case, more so than just reading the case in a casebook.
PBS and The History Channel also have some good background and explanations on why this case is important.

Monday, August 31, 2015

Passing the Bar Exam

I have just gotten the letter that confirms that I have passed the bar exam.  I was asked by a friend who has yet to take it for some advice.
Here is what I immediately thought of:
1. Do at least 1 essay a day AND at least 10-20 multiple practice questions a day.
2. Read the answers to the multiples, both the right answer and why other choices were wrong.
3. Use a review program, and pay attention to their tips/tricks to memorize information and state specific rules.
4. As you get closer (like 3 weeks) do at least 2 essays a day AND 40 multiple choice questions a day. You are building stamina.
5. If you have the chance to do mock exams - do them and follow the time constraints your state will use.
6. It is true that you should do every essay and multiple you can get your hands on, it is practice and reading the answers will help you.
7. Pace yourself, it is a marathon not a sprint.  Figure out what you need to do and how much time you need to do it.  Then spread it out so you get everything in a week to two weeks before the exam and spend that extra time on what you feel weakest in.
8. The day before the exam only do multiple choice and no more than 50 practice questions.
9. DO your best on the exam, you learned it in law school or during the review, you just need to remember it.

Thursday, May 7, 2015

Graduation

Graduation is finally here.
Four years ago I started this journey and it has been so time consuming, emotionally consuming, and physically exhausting.  However, I could not have been more thankful for what I went through, and that I have made it through this.  I don't know what my future hold, but I am thankful that I decided to make this change in my life and battled through this.  I am thankful for my friends and family that have stood by me, encouraged me, and been there even when I couldn't stand myself.

I am getting ready to graduate tomorrow, and I am starting to prepare for the bar examination.  This blog was meant to help me record my experiences, but I quickly realized that working full-time, and doing a joint degree meant the daily logs I hoped for would not happen.  I am hopeful that soon I will be able to turn this blog into a tips, hints, strategies, and advice page for those considering going to law school and those going through it.

I look forward to the new challenges that my life will hold, whatever they may be.

Sunday, March 15, 2015

Some Interesting Cyberbullying Cases

Cyberbullying cases are going to be on the rise.  States are trying to figure out how to protect children and  victims of crimes/domestic abuse/stalking.  Several states have made attempts at putting statutes into effect on this matter.  Below are cases that address these statutes, if I find a statute that has been upheld or not challenged I will add it.
Please note this is a working document, and laws and cases change. These cases and statutes may be appealed or overturned, so you need to check before citing these cases or relying on them.

New York:
People v. Marquan, 24 N.Y. 3d 1 (2014)  - A high school student anonymously posted sexual information and photographs of fellow classmates.
Justia  NY Courts
Articles and reviews/summaries of the cases:
Reuters article  NYCLU article