Thread: What is invovled in the NY bar exam and how should I study for it?

  1.   What is invovled in the NY bar exam and how should I study for it? #1
    1. Could somebody tell me whether NY essays will also cover NY subjects? If so, what is the percentage of MBE subjects and NY subjects in the 5 essays? 2. I read some barbri NY subjects outlines, but don't really understand them. What's the best way to learn all these new materails of NY law as a CA law student? 3. How do you roughly arrange the time. I like to hear somebody's suggestions on a pretty detailed schdule. Daily schdele will be even better.

  2.   Re: What is invovled in the NY bar exam and how should I study for it? #2
    Please take a NY specific prep !!! It's important !
    1. check out http://www.nybarexam.org for the format of the exams

    2. you can post the questions you don't understand on studyfor.com (worked for me) or just buy outlines that have explanation.

    to answer your question: the essays deal with NY subjects. In fact the
    essay questions are given on what is called the "NY
    day" , i.e Tuesday 24th of July, the first day. The
    next day is the MBE day and tests Multistate subjects. The essays can deal with any of the 23 subjects this
    NY bar has total. They can all come up. Of
    course, the essays can be on Torts, or Contracts, or
    Criminal Law, which are also multistate subjects. However
    on the NY day, you will have to give the NY Law. For
    example, in criminal law, you'll give the NY criminal law.
    You gotta know the distinctions specific to the NY
    law. If you don't know and give the multistate law you
    can make huge mistakes. I already gave examples of
    differences in other messages, but here's more. Example: in
    NY, a defendant CAN comspire with a police officer
    (whereas on MS, it's the contrary). Or a defendant can
    actually withdraw from a conspiracy in NY under some
    speficis terms, and it's not the case for MS, you can't
    withdraw from a conspiracy. NY Torts have very tricky and
    specific rules for damages to prove in slander and libel
    cases which really have nothing to do with MS
    etc.
    So since I am talking about it here, since you have
    to know the NY Law for the essays (and for the NY
    MCQs)...I'd say there is almost no way you can pass this bar
    without taking the Barbri prep. PMBR will prepare you
    only for the multistate portion.
    If you want to be
    greedy now and avoid the Barbri prep, it's not a good
    investment. I think you'll be spending time and money for
    nothing. You'll be spending money to get to NY, Hotel,
    PMBR etc. all that probably for nothing.

    3. With regard to study schedules - 7 to 8 hours a day *minimum*. If
    you are taking BarBri, they will provide you with a
    detailed and comprehensive day-by-day study schedule which
    you should not vary from. If you cannot take BarBri,
    you need to come up with your own day-by-day
    schedule, spending 2-3 days on each subject, doing essays,
    performance tests, and MBE questions each day. You should
    plan on doing 3-4 essays, at least one performence
    test, and 50 MBE questions each day (although with
    performance tests, you can do one every 2-3 days - one per
    day is probably overkill). I think 7-8 hours of solid
    studying per day is a minimum.

    Example in http://www.law.howard.edu/faculty/pa...m/agheebar.htm

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