How long and how often do you study a day?? Forum
-
- Posts: 2
- Joined: Sun Sep 19, 2010 4:45 am
How long and how often do you study a day??
I know each persons studying pattern is different and the amount of time needed depends on person to person and from law school to law school...But I just wanted a general idea of how much time people put into studying ....not including class time
- burtonrideclub
- Posts: 165
- Joined: Mon Mar 03, 2008 6:10 pm
Re: How long and how often do you study a day??
Two and a half hours a day. That is for the reading and maybe looking over a couple supplements. Add a couple of hours on top of that if I'm working on Legal Writing assignments. I'll try to work 5-6 hours total over the weekend, usually on friday afternoon and sunday night.
It seems too early to start outlining (though I will start soon), and don't want to waste practice tests when we know about a third of the material tops.
It seems too early to start outlining (though I will start soon), and don't want to waste practice tests when we know about a third of the material tops.
- kalvano
- Posts: 11951
- Joined: Mon Sep 07, 2009 2:24 am
Re: How long and how often do you study a day??
There are several threads on this already.
- Doritos
- Posts: 1214
- Joined: Tue Nov 24, 2009 8:24 pm
- GeePee
- Posts: 1273
- Joined: Fri Jul 03, 2009 7:35 pm
Re: How long and how often do you study a day??
LOLDoritos wrote:
Want to continue reading?
Register now to search topics and post comments!
Absolutely FREE!
Already a member? Login
-
- Posts: 83
- Joined: Thu Aug 26, 2010 3:02 pm
Re: How long and how often do you study a day??
stop caring wtf other people are doing and concentrate on what you are doing.
FTW
FTW
- rdcws000
- Posts: 308
- Joined: Wed Mar 10, 2010 7:41 pm
Re: How long and how often do you study a day??
Maybe OP just wants someone to talk to?
- Doritos
- Posts: 1214
- Joined: Tue Nov 24, 2009 8:24 pm
Re: How long and how often do you study a day??
I'm glad someone appreciated thatGeePee wrote:LOLDoritos wrote:image
- mikeytwoshoes
- Posts: 1111
- Joined: Thu Jun 26, 2008 11:45 pm
Re: How long and how often do you study a day??
If you're at less than 18 hours, you're boned.
- mikeytwoshoes
- Posts: 1111
- Joined: Thu Jun 26, 2008 11:45 pm
Re: How long and how often do you study a day??
Never work on Friday afternoons.* After class on Friday is a holy time. This is your time to relax and unwind. You need this to prepare for your eight-nine hour days on Saturday and Sunday.burtonrideclub wrote:Two and a half hours a day. That is for the reading and maybe looking over a couple supplements. Add a couple of hours on top of that if I'm working on Legal Writing assignments. I'll try to work 5-6 hours total over the weekend, usually on friday afternoon and sunday night.
It seems too early to start outlining (though I will start soon), and don't want to waste practice tests when we know about a third of the material tops.
*Finals prep and other crunch time excepted.
- GoodToBeTheKing
- Posts: 296
- Joined: Thu Jul 02, 2009 12:34 pm
Re: How long and how often do you study a day??
about 10 hours a day i am on campus...
- zeth006
- Posts: 1167
- Joined: Tue May 12, 2009 2:54 am
Re: How long and how often do you study a day??
Cutting out all my unproductive moments of checking FB, going to the bathroom, getting a drink, etc? Probably no more than 4-5 hours.
- zeth006
- Posts: 1167
- Joined: Tue May 12, 2009 2:54 am
Re: How long and how often do you study a day??
Agreed. I could never understood people who say you need to be working straight through Friday/Saturday/Sunday. After 5 straight days of class and studying, I just don't have it in me to outline or read another case. I use that time to go grocery shopping, cook dinner for the next few days, do laundry, and go out at night. Jamming 7/7 days a week is probably a surefire way to burn out in no time.mikeytwoshoes wrote:Never work on Friday afternoons.* After class on Friday is a holy time. This is your time to relax and unwind. You need this to prepare for your eight-nine hour days on Saturday and Sunday.burtonrideclub wrote:Two and a half hours a day. That is for the reading and maybe looking over a couple supplements. Add a couple of hours on top of that if I'm working on Legal Writing assignments. I'll try to work 5-6 hours total over the weekend, usually on friday afternoon and sunday night.
It seems too early to start outlining (though I will start soon), and don't want to waste practice tests when we know about a third of the material tops.
*Finals prep and other crunch time excepted.
Register now!
Resources to assist law school applicants, students & graduates.
It's still FREE!
Already a member? Login
-
- Posts: 17
- Joined: Mon Sep 27, 2010 2:37 am
Re: How long and how often do you study a day??
Since it's still September, I'm lucky if I read 3-4 times a week. Weekends are a deadzone with partying, college football Saturdays, and hangover Sundays. I get more serious in late October when it's time to start going through supplements.
-
- Posts: 96
- Joined: Fri Mar 27, 2009 12:29 pm
Re: How long and how often do you study a day??
Part-timer here: 8 hours on Sunday and that's it. I'll brush up on the cases on the train ride in, but no serious reading can be done there.
-
- Posts: 408
- Joined: Tue Apr 13, 2010 6:47 pm
Re: How long and how often do you study a day??
I don't do anything Friday afternoon and Sunday afternoon. I like to have more free time during the week so I put in pretty significant hours on the weekend. 12 hours of class a week plus I averaged 4.7 hours a day of no bullshit checking gmail/facebook/whatever studying for September. Some days are 0, some are 12. I put a huge amount of time into my first legal writing assignment, so my actual study time for classes is probably lower.
I really enjoy the material but I abhor Contracts. Hopefully it will start making more sense a little later on. For people who are worried about getting burned out from studying 2-4 hours a week now, good luck in practice.
I really enjoy the material but I abhor Contracts. Hopefully it will start making more sense a little later on. For people who are worried about getting burned out from studying 2-4 hours a week now, good luck in practice.
-
- Posts: 50
- Joined: Fri Sep 24, 2010 12:27 pm
Re: How long and how often do you study a day??
To each his own, but I actually LIKE to put in some substantial time on Thursday/Friday.
I actually think that it prevents burnout, because then I don't feel like I'm constantly scrambling to read an hour before class.
Of course, sometimes if you read too many days ahead, you completely forget everything by Monday. I have some extremely Socratic professors, so you have to be really on top of the material when class comes about.
I don't know ... a lot of this is just by feel. I think everyone is seeking the golden key to perfect grades, and it doesn't really exist.
I actually think that it prevents burnout, because then I don't feel like I'm constantly scrambling to read an hour before class.
Of course, sometimes if you read too many days ahead, you completely forget everything by Monday. I have some extremely Socratic professors, so you have to be really on top of the material when class comes about.
I don't know ... a lot of this is just by feel. I think everyone is seeking the golden key to perfect grades, and it doesn't really exist.
Get unlimited access to all forums and topics
Register now!
I'm pretty sure I told you it's FREE...
Already a member? Login
- RUQRU
- Posts: 134
- Joined: Tue Mar 09, 2010 7:32 pm
Re: How long and how often do you study a day??
If the final is worth +99% of your grade why are you worried about flubbing up in front of an "extremely Socratic professor"? What happens to your grade if you can't remember the name of the characters in a case? Will knowing every minute fact get you a better grade?DiscoveryDeadline wrote:To each his own, but I actually LIKE to put in some substantial time on Thursday/Friday.
I actually think that it prevents burnout, because then I don't feel like I'm constantly scrambling to read an hour before class.
Of course, sometimes if you read too many days ahead, you completely forget everything by Monday. I have some extremely Socratic professors, so you have to be really on top of the material when class comes about.
I don't know ... a lot of this is just by feel. I think everyone is seeking the golden key to perfect grades, and it doesn't really exist.
-
- Posts: 50
- Joined: Fri Sep 24, 2010 12:27 pm
Re: How long and how often do you study a day??
Good point. I should have been more clear.RUQRU wrote:If the final is worth +99% of your grade why are you worried about flubbing up in front of an "extremely Socratic professor"? What happens to your grade if you can't remember the name of the characters in a case? Will knowing every minute fact get you a better grade?DiscoveryDeadline wrote:To each his own, but I actually LIKE to put in some substantial time on Thursday/Friday.
I actually think that it prevents burnout, because then I don't feel like I'm constantly scrambling to read an hour before class.
Of course, sometimes if you read too many days ahead, you completely forget everything by Monday. I have some extremely Socratic professors, so you have to be really on top of the material when class comes about.
I don't know ... a lot of this is just by feel. I think everyone is seeking the golden key to perfect grades, and it doesn't really exist.
The preparation isn't to cover your ass in case you get called on. It's to enable you to follow along with the discussion in the class. You can get lost in the thicket pretty quickly when you have a hide-the-ball professor running the classroom.
And the point of prepping isn't to memorize the minute facts of the case. It is to grasp the nuances of the legal reasoning. For all that we stereotype about professors grilling students on facts of the case that don't really matter, I would say 90 percent of Socratic questions are about the court's reasoning.
- zeth006
- Posts: 1167
- Joined: Tue May 12, 2009 2:54 am
Re: How long and how often do you study a day??
Learned that the hard way today during Civ. Didn't read the dissenting opinion which actually happened to be really important. Glad I have my supplements to explain everything clearly.DiscoveryDeadline wrote:Good point. I should have been more clear.RUQRU wrote:If the final is worth +99% of your grade why are you worried about flubbing up in front of an "extremely Socratic professor"? What happens to your grade if you can't remember the name of the characters in a case? Will knowing every minute fact get you a better grade?DiscoveryDeadline wrote:To each his own, but I actually LIKE to put in some substantial time on Thursday/Friday.
I actually think that it prevents burnout, because then I don't feel like I'm constantly scrambling to read an hour before class.
Of course, sometimes if you read too many days ahead, you completely forget everything by Monday. I have some extremely Socratic professors, so you have to be really on top of the material when class comes about.
I don't know ... a lot of this is just by feel. I think everyone is seeking the golden key to perfect grades, and it doesn't really exist.
The preparation isn't to cover your ass in case you get called on. It's to enable you to follow along with the discussion in the class. You can get lost in the thicket pretty quickly when you have a hide-the-ball professor running the classroom.
And the point of prepping isn't to memorize the minute facts of the case. It is to grasp the nuances of the legal reasoning. For all that we stereotype about professors grilling students on facts of the case that don't really matter, I would say 90 percent of Socratic questions are about the court's reasoning.
Communicate now with those who not only know what a legal education is, but can offer you worthy advice and commentary as you complete the three most educational, yet challenging years of your law related post graduate life.
Register now, it's still FREE!
Already a member? Login