How To Study Law: 4 Quick Tips

Whether you have to prepare for the first of a long series of law exams (in case you are studying law), or if you are preparing to study the first and last (because fortunately, your faculty does not include others) there are a series of steps to follow that can help you to face the study with intelligence, method, and serenity. Let’s see them together.

Aim For The Goal In Small Steps

We know it well: the idea of ??having to pass a big and impressive exam makes your knees come to a little milk. You are there looking at all the books and notes and, in an instant, the “Oh no, look at how much stuff, I’ll never make it!”.

But there is a trick to being able to study law without anxiety: do it in small steps, one bite at a time. Keyword: resizing. Don’t think about the upcoming exam, but about what you have to do, time by time, to get there.

If you plan your studying in such a way that you have a small goal to take home each day, you will arrive at the end of the preparation almost without realizing it. And if you would still need some help with your essays, an essay writing service will be a solution for you to not ruin your study plan and to hand in everything on time. 

Plan Your Study Carefully

To be able to face the preparation one micro-objective at a time it is, therefore, necessary to carry out a careful organization of the study, a battle plan!

You have to take all the material to prepare and divide it according to the days you have available to study. Thanks to this calculation you will know how many pages to do per day and you will have found your daily goal to complete if the world falls!

While doing this calculation, however, pay attention to two things:

1) Try to keep yourself a little off, that is, if it turns out that you have to study 20 pages a day, you do 22. This allows you to get a few extra days to use for the “unexpected” because it could happen the time you stay badly or just don’t feel like it. The study “lost” in these exceptional circumstances you will be able to recover thanks to the extra time you will have obtained by studying a few more pages every day.

2) When you look at your calendar to calculate the days that separate you from the exam, do not count them all, but only those that are really “useful”, that is, those that you are sure to use to study. I tell you this because it is very important that within the week you can get a day off just for you in which to release stress, recharge, and relax. Because remember that you don’t need to cancel your social life to be just booked: just study intelligently (now we see it)!

Study Smart

Once you have realized your plan, as soon as you finally start studying, do it intelligently. What does it mean? I’ll explain it to you.

In your texts and notes, not all information is equally important. There are things that absolutely must be known because they constitute the soul, the skeleton of an argument. And then there are a whole series of secondary notions that, if known, raise the grade a little (and so be it), but are not essential to pass the exam. 

The smart way to study is to first focus on the famous 20% I am talking about in the article, the “hard core” of your preparation, and then, only if you have time, go deeper into the various secondary topics.

Find Keywords And Create Mind Maps

Once you’re in the book, finding yourself reading chapter by chapter without logic would waste a lot of time. How can you focus a little more on the really important things and quickly move on to the secondary ones if you don’t know where they are in the text?

The solution is to start with skimming, a sort of preparatory reading that makes you understand quickly what are the main topics that are addressed within the book.  Once you have done the indicative analysis of the text, for each topic you are going to analyze, highlight the keywords and create mind maps. The keywords you need to create hooks, immediate and synthetic, thanks to which you can go and retrieve a certain topic in your memory. Putting them into a mind map allows you to create an outline of the whole structure of the topic itself, from general to particular, and the various important links to remember.


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