resilience99 wrote:I am just curious what your daily study schedule was in the last few weeks?
I had pretty much abandoned taking down notes for class. I completely stopped briefing cases, and as a result, I didn't ace any cold-calls.
Instead, I started to really work on my outlines. At this point, I had 3 outlines up to date. And instead of taking down notes for class, I would just add the case to the relevant section in my outline, with the BLL and a one sentence fact description.
Then, around Thanksgiving, I sat down and started to condense all of the information, and started to make an attack outline. I made an important note to myself: keep the attack outlines short, no more than 10 pages each.
Then, during the study days, I used my updated attack outline and started doing practice problems, and worked on the professor's old exams.
I met with a study partner, and him and I would review the exam, and fine-tune our attack outlines for exam day.
And this may sound nuts, but the day before each exam, I stopped studying at 5 PM. I put my books away entirely. I went for a run, or caught up on a few episodes on Netflix, or played some Skyrim.
Then, I made sure to go to bed at a reasonable time.
Then, in the morning of each exam when I arrived at school, I found a secluded area, completely away from other law students, and read over my attack outline for that exam.
As a disclaimer, however, I have to say I felt like some of the exam grading really was a crap-shoot. I used this very methodical approach; one of my other friends spent two days cramming for the exam, and him and I got the exact same grade in the class.