For those who've taken LEEWS-- Step 1?
Posted: Mon Nov 07, 2011 7:44 pm
I took LEEWS at the start of the semester, but I found that blindly following it really screwed me up on my (ungraded) midterm. Overall, it seemed like a very good program and helped me gain some great insight. I guess my main issue is the Step 1 Analysis.
For those of you who have mastered LEEWS, how did you manage to master that step? I just could never understand how it was possible to identify all the parties and what each party wants without a deep read of the problem first. In our class, Wentworth kept saying how we should never read the problem, and should just skim to identify each party and what each party wants.
Then he would have a big list compiled of every single possible party and claim they could make. And once you have that list, writing an organized exam response becomes a lot more simplified. I am just puzzled as to how you can compile a list identifying so many issues, without having ever done a full read-through of the problem.
I feel like that's what screwed me over on my midterm because I tried so hard to follow his advice, but now I feel like I would have been better off had I read the entire problem before I outlined. I even try his practice problems in the back of the book, but find that I struggle with completing Step 1 without doing a deep read of the problem first.
Anybody have any advice on how they were able to master the outlining stage?
For those of you who have mastered LEEWS, how did you manage to master that step? I just could never understand how it was possible to identify all the parties and what each party wants without a deep read of the problem first. In our class, Wentworth kept saying how we should never read the problem, and should just skim to identify each party and what each party wants.
Then he would have a big list compiled of every single possible party and claim they could make. And once you have that list, writing an organized exam response becomes a lot more simplified. I am just puzzled as to how you can compile a list identifying so many issues, without having ever done a full read-through of the problem.
I feel like that's what screwed me over on my midterm because I tried so hard to follow his advice, but now I feel like I would have been better off had I read the entire problem before I outlined. I even try his practice problems in the back of the book, but find that I struggle with completing Step 1 without doing a deep read of the problem first.
Anybody have any advice on how they were able to master the outlining stage?