This is a Question on "Should I make my own flashcards and outlines for the CA bar exam?"; How should I study for the Ca bar exam? Should I make my own flashcards and outlines or should I ...
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| New Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 50
![]() | Should I make my own flashcards and outlines for the CA bar exam? How should I study for the Ca bar exam? Should I make my own flashcards and outlines or should I just use the commercial ones out there? |
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| | #2 |
| New Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 18
![]() | Re: Should I make my own flashcards and outlines for the CA bar exam? I put something together from reading former3f.blogspot.com Learn information. Sit for a test. Nothing beyond that matters So for you test-takers out there - this post is for you. Concrete advice on how to study for the California Bar Exam. But Hoov, why should we listen to you? You have the most awe-inspiring blog ever, but how does that qualify you to render Bar Exam advice? Easy. I passed the Bar on my second try. That means I did it wrong once, and I did it right once. So ignore my advice at your own peril. 1. Don't Believe the Hype For the next 2.5 months, you're going to be surrounded by people in a perpetual state of freak-out. BarBri will freak you out. Your classmates will freak you out. You will see a complete stranger at Starbucks with a Conviser outline, and this will freak you out - I don't know why. It just does. The most important thing for your Bar studying is to rise above the culture of fear. Freaking out does not get you points on the Bar. Frantic worrying will not cause your brain to suck in Products Liability elements by osmosis. Think of it like this: You have a job to do. Learn information; Sit for a test. Nothing beyond that matters. Pressure from parents, expectations of significant others, the weight of uncertainty crushing your soul - none of that affects your score in the least. Forget what happens after the bar. Forget the jobs you might get or might lose or what your friends will think if you fail. None of it matters. Learn the information. Sit for the test. The rest is hype, and it won't give you a single point on the Bar. 2. The Bread and Butter: Study Simple Flashcards, going over missed questions, writing your own outlines, CD's, tapes, etc. Forget about it. The first Bar Exam - I did all that. The second Bar Exam - I didn't. What more needs to be said? Keep it simple. Read the outlines and do practice MBE questions until you want to die, and then do 20 more. The importance of MBE practice questions cannot be overstated. I said it then, and I'll say it now: The MBE does not care if you know the law - the MBE only cares if you know the MBE. Dozens of questions on the MBE will not depend on your knowledge of the law; they will depend on your ability to out-think the question. You think you pick up that skill by reading the outlines? Or doing flashcards and CD's? Trust me. You don't. And don't stress too much about the BarBri practice essays. It's totally bogus. Go ahead and do them and time yourself, but the BarBri graders are morons. Once, as an experiment, I spent three hours writing one practice essay. I used all of the materials, and organized it perfectly, with headings and underlining and all of that. I even cheated and looked at the sample answer to make sure I got all of the points. It was of course, vastly beyond what any person could every hope to write in one hour at the actual Bar. I got a 55. So do the practice essays, but ignore the answers you get. If I had to do it over again, I wouldn't even turn them in. But I got some good posts out of it, at least. 3. Stay Loose One of my most important study tips is to not study. Seriously. There is an inversely proportionate relationship between your stress level and your ability to absorb information. So take time off. And I don't mean take a half hour to walk the dog around the block. Or take off two hours to watch the Season Finale of LOST. Although you should do that. What I mean is, take Sundays off. I did that during the second Bar. Did I mention that I passed that one? Take off two whole days and watch a season of a TV show on DVD. I'm totally serious. I did it during the second Bar. LOST Season 1. Are you starting to sense a pattern? But Hoov! Then I would get behind on the BarBri Paced Program! Oh, right. The hallowed Paced Program. That thing is lame. Almost as lame as BarBri's practice MBE questions. You know what subjects are on the Bar, and you know what you need to do to learn them. Do you need BarBri to tell you that? Of course not. You made it through three years of law school without anyone trying to be your study nanny and printing you out a fancy calendar. You can make it three more months. Conclusion You're not going to hear study advice like that anywhere else. And even if you don't like the particulars and you think I'm an idiot, at least try to walk away with this key concept: Avoid the group-think. Don't let your classmates suck you in to their nervous breakdowns. They will not be taking your test. Only you are. What your classmates do and how they study is completely irrelevant. |
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| | #3 |
| New Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 37
![]() | Re: Should I make my own flashcards and outlines for the CA bar exam? outlines is necessary but flashcards is not I think it is absolutely necessary to have outlines with you so that you can refresh your memory right before the bar exam. also, studying from an outline assures the fact that you know what the main issues and the general rules are. Flashcards, however, for me was not that important. I think some people need flashcards to memorize, but I surely did not need it. If you can't live without flashcards in the past, then don't risk it, go ahead and get your flashcards. I just think flashcards can't help you put everything together the way outlines does, but it does help you remember general rules and exceptions :) |
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