The Atlanta Lawyer April 2017 | Page 14

Law School Life A Letter to My Former Self Preparing for the Georgia Bar Exam Ellis Liu Wilson Elser Moskowitz Edelman & Dicker LLP [email protected] Dear Ellis, Congratulations on graduating law school. Now get over yourself–the bar exam is around the corner, and you are doomed if you procras- tinate like it’s another law school exam. Here are four things to keep in mind: (1) Set a realistic schedule. Many people fall behind the bar review schedule. Unless you are only a cou- ple days behind, do not attempt to catch up to the bar review schedule; doing so may risk sufficient study time for the topics you know least. Reevaluate your schedule to focus on the topics you need to study, based on what you know least and what appears on the exam most (i.e. do not spend four days on Commercial Paper and one day on Property). (2) Focus on practice problems, not outlines. You have learned most of this material in law school, so do not spend too much time in the outlines–dive into the practice problems. One strategy: review outlines twice, then do multiple choice questions (when you come across a question you cannot answer confidently, do not guess–just mark it as "to be re- viewed"). Then review the outline re: only the questions you missed/ 14 April 2017 marked as "to be reviewed." Do not spend time reviewing the outline re: questions you answered correctly (you have learned it in class, studied it for finals, and reviewed it for the bar exam– you will not get those questions wrong on test day). On practice essays, remember to “think like a lawyer." Essays pri- marily test your ability to reason, to organize, and to present. Learn the specific rules and exceptions as best you can, but if you get an essay and you blank on the pre- cise rules, do not get caught in the weeds. Take a step back, consider the general principles of law, and reason through the question. Focus on the reasoning behind laws gener- ally, how to organize that reasoning, and how to present that reasoning applied to a fact pattern. Legal writing is formulaic and bar exam graders can be analogized to calculators: they read your content (like a calculator reads numbers), and they follow your content if you use the correct signals like a cal- culator follows (+)(-)(/)(x). Nearly every sentence should start with (1) "According to [law]"; (2) "Here, [facts]"; or (3) "Therefore, [conclu- sion]." These words are your signals, like (+)(-)(/)(x). (3) Eat, sleep, and exercise. Bar re- view is mentally exhausting–your brain needs to be in optimal con- dition through these next weeks. Ignoring your health will burden your brain: lack of sleep clouds your mind, unhealthy food slows metabolism and affects self-image (now is not the time to deal with self-image issues), and lack of ex- ercise deprives your body of help- ful hormones. In the cost/benefit analysis, the extra hours you spend on your health are more beneficial than those same hours applied to bar review when your brain and body are less healthy. Also, call your parents. (4) Most importantly, you will not fail the bar exam, and you must ac- cept this now. Exam passers share three qualities: (1) they graduated from an accredited law school, (2) they prepared for the exam, and (3) they are not anxious. You possess the first two qualities. Do not let anxiety hold you back. Have faith that you possess the first two quali- ties, and the third quality will follow. Finally, just do you. You have been studying for exams for the past two decades–and you have been do- ing it very well. If you study best by memorizing outlines, do that. If you are a flash carder, do that. Work alone or work in groups–just do what you have been doing. Do not change what ain't broke. ▪