Finished my Criminal Final tonight, so just Torts left, and this semester is over! I will make no prognostication about my performance. I’m sure I did better than I think and not as good as I hope. Who knows? It will be another 5-6 weeks before I get my grades back anyway.
I have come out of this finals period with some valuable lessons though, which I would love to share for all you pre-1Ls out there:
1. Briefing is valuable for keeping up with the development of ideas in class, but the value of briefing for exams is minimal. (Keep in mind, this might not be true of more case-centric courses, like Con Law.) You should brief, but brief briefly. 🙂
2. Outline. Outline. Outline. Seriously.
Now, here’s the thing, everyone will say, “Outline the way that means something to you” which I think is a total B.S. cop out. I’m going to tell you how to outline:
- First, start with your course syllabus, make each one of the topics a major header in your outline.
Next, underneath each header, make subheaders for each of the rules/concepts that apply to that section; use your class notes to round this out. Cross-check this with a hornbooks and/or commercial outline. Some of the “Understanding” series are really great… The Criminal One (Dressler) is especially good.
Now, under each rule/concept, fill in an example or descriptive paragraph. It’s best to do this from a synthesis of your notes and either a hornbook (preferably) or (if necessary) a commercial outline. The rules you can crib verbatim from the texts. Or from your notes, if you have a persnickety Prof. like my torts Prof., who wants us to spit back his definitions. But come up with your own explanations and examples that mean something to you.
- Finally, refine your outline to your liking. Rearrange concepts in order that make sense to you. Commit the rules to memory, but pare down, hone, and tweak your explanations and your examples until they become second nature.
If you follow those steps, I think you will be well prepared. And if you don’t like that method, feel free to use a different one. But I wanted to share that because one of the most frustrating things to me about all the “advice” sessions they have at school is that everyone says, “outline.” Then, when you ask, “How?” They all say, “Whatever works for you”. If someone says that to you, feel free to answer, “If I knew that, dipshit, I wouldn’t be asking! I’m a g-ddamn 1L!”*
3. Re-exam how you are taking notes in class. Are you really writing down what’s important? Or are you blindly scribbling away, hoping to sort it out later? Spend less time taking notes on the cases and more time paying attention. Most of the case doesn’t matter anyway. Spend more time taking notes on the concepts. (Hint: only a few, if that many, concepts come up in each class period. That chump typing away in the back of class is either recording stuff that doesn’t matter, blogging, or e-mailing his girlfriend.)
4. Start your outline the first or second week of class. Keep it up-to-date. Not that I did this, but I wish now that I had. If I had, I could have spent reading period reviewing my outline, and seriously delving in depth into any concepts I was unclear on. However, as it was, I spend most of the reading period on… my outline. Which was beneficial (see the process above) but it would have been really great to hit the reading period with a (mostly) completed outline.
5. Don’t panic. Panic kills. Do whatever it takes on test day to relax. Get a massage. Be all loosey goosey. It doesn’t pay to be tense. At least for me.
6. Don’t post mortem! It ain’t med school. Don’t dissect the test. Your peers don’t have anything to add. Take a cue from the Army: Don’t ask, don’t tell. Guess what, you did what you could and now it’s over. You can’t change your answers and knowing now that an aggressor can re-establish their right to self-defense by withdrawing isn’t going to help you now, is it? Is it?!
7. Good luck! Honestly, exams are tough, no doubt about it. But the hardest thing is overcoming the culture of fear that swirls around law schools. I think the mythos is perpetuated by attorneys and upperclassmen who feel some sort of fraternal bond, so they want to haze the new guys. Half the fear and intimidation in law school isn’t from the work, it’s from your peers.
Really excellent advice, especially the outlining and not listening to your peers obsess after an exam!