Law school is a trade school, not a subject to be memorized; you win by mastering a process, not by knowing the answers. Success comes from building a functional outline all semester and relentlessly drilling practice exams.
You can’t “study” for law school. Not in the way you did in college. There’s no set body of facts to memorize. Law school is a trade school hiding in an academic wrapper. You're learning a process, not a subject.
Your job isn't to know the answer. It's to know how to find one by applying a rigid analytical framework to messy human problems. That's the whole game. Once you get that, everything else gets a little easier.
You'll be assigned an impossible amount of reading. Hundreds of pages a week, dense with 19th-century judicial language. You can't read it all. And you're not supposed to.
Reading a case isn't like reading a textbook. You’re not reading to absorb information. You’re hunting for four specific things:
That's it. That's your case brief. Anything else is noise. The elaborate backstory, the procedural history, the judge's long-winded thoughts on society—ignore it. Find the rule. Pull it out. Move on. Read the case once to get the story, then read it a second time to pull out only those four parts.
Everything you do all semester builds a single document: your outline. This isn't a summary of the course. It’s the tool you’ll use on the final exam. You don't study from the outline; the act of making the outline is the studying.
Start it in the first few weeks and use the syllabus as your skeleton. After each class, distill your case briefs and lecture notes into it. The goal is to build a guide that makes sense to you, one that shows how the arguments connect from one topic to the next. A 75-page outline is useless. You need something clean that you can actually use.
You will never have enough time. Just accept it. The only way through is to treat law school like a 9-to-5 job. Schedule everything. Block out time for reading, for outlining, and for having a life. I remember trying to cram for Torts at 4:17 PM on a Tuesday in my 2011 Honda Civic, knowing I was completely sunk because I hadn't made my outline yet. That's what happens when you don't have a schedule.
You have to build a routine and stick to it. Use a calendar, set reminders, whatever it takes. The system doesn't matter as much as your commitment to it.
Memorizing the law is useless. The exams don’t test what you know; they test if you can apply what you know to a completely new set of facts. The only way to get good at this is practice.
Get every old exam your professor has written. Do them under timed conditions. Write out full answers using the IRAC (Issue, Rule, Application, Conclusion) method. This isn't optional; it's the structure for all legal writing. Your analysis—the "A" in IRAC—is where you score nearly all your points. It’s where you connect the facts of the problem to the parts of the rule you just stated.
Most study groups are a waste of time. But they have one good use: reviewing practice exams together. Talk through your answers. Argue about the analysis. That back-and-forth is what builds the actual skill.
Don't worry about getting ahead. Just be prepared for today's class.
Stop memorizing formulas; it's the biggest mistake you can make in physics. Focus on understanding the core concepts first, and the ability to solve problems will follow.
Stop fighting your ADHD brain with useless advice that doesn't work. Instead, use practical strategies that work *with* your interest-based wiring, like the 20-minute rule and gamifying your tasks to stay focused.
Stop fighting your brain and start tricking it to beat procrastination. Break down overwhelming goals into ridiculously small tasks and use timed work sessions to build unstoppable momentum.
Good study habits for kids aren't about enforcing rules; they're about building confidence. Use simple routines and break down tasks to make learning feel like a game they know how to win.
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