How to Survive the First Year of Law School At The University of Texas by Mike Godwin, mnemonic@eff.org (Copyright 1988,1992. This article may be freely distributed on any computer forum, including commercial online services. To reproduce it in print or in any other non-computer medium, please seek permission from the author.) ----------- You went to a decent college, you scored well on your Law School Admission Test, and you ranked in the top 10 percent of your class. So, now that you're here at The University of Texas School of Law, you can look forward to an unbroken string of acadernic successes, right? Not so fast. No matter how easy you found undergraduate school to be, law school is a different story. And the sooner you learn that, the better your chances of coming out of the law-school game a winner. First, disabuse yourself of any notions about your natural academic superiority. Sure, you're good, but so is everyone else in your class. And since everyone is graded against everyone else on a curve, the chances are nine out of 10 that you'll be in the bottom 90 percent of your class, regardless of your undergraduate performance. This means that law-school success doesn't come merely from knowing the law; you have to know it better than most of your peers. So you can't be complacent. If you start heeding the following hints early in your first semester, they'll improve your chances of hot job offers...and maybe even an editorship on the law review. Class Participation If you saw the movie "The Paper Chase" (and odds are that you did, or you wouldn't be here), you probably know that large classes in law school normally are run by "the Socratic method." Rather than lecturing, the professor will assign some reading for the day and conduct the class by asking students questions about the material. Watching the movie, you probably got the impression that the best law students are those who are eager and able to answer the professor's questions. Don't be fooled. Glibness and self-possession in class are only roughly correlated to exam performance, and your grades are based almost entirely on final exams, not on your quickness in the classroom. Because the finals are graded anonymously, the professor won't even be able to link your classroom participation with the exam. It's far wiser to spend your time mastering the principles behind each case you read rather than memorizing its facts. If you try the latter tactic, your brain will be too muddled with facts at exam time to allow you to apply the law. Don't worry about the inevitable instances in which a professor tries to embarass you for knowing less than he does. (I refer to the professor as "he" because almost all UT law professors are male. Most are white, too). You can get your revenge by earning an honors grade in the course. Class Preparation Keep up with the assigned reading. Onerous though the reading may be, it's easier to keep up than to catch up. And reading the cases for the day will enable you to answer most of the questions any professor tries to throw at you. If for some reason you do get behind on the reading, however, don't panic. This happens to some of the best law students. Attend class anyway, even if you haven't read that day's class materials. The professor's Socratic questions will clue you in to the issues he expects you to know for the exam. Professors Some law professors are frightening; others are charming. Ultimately, however, their personalities don't matter very much. Whether he likes you or not, each professor will grade your exam according to the curve. There's no such thing as an "easy" law course, although you may find some lectures more tolerable than oothers. If the material is easy for you, it may well be easy for everybody, so the curve can get you anyway. While some law professors make a pretense of keeping office hours, most of them don't really want to see you outside the classroom, a milieu they prefer because that's where they have all the control. Any question you want to ask a professor probably can be answered by a "hornbook" (legal treatise) anyway, and library is full of hornbooks. Don't expect too much sympathy from your professors. After all, law school is a game they've *won.* They may have some sort of abstract pity for the poor contracts student who's agonizing over Sec. 2-207 of the Uniform Commercial Code, but under no cirumstances will you be able to persuade them to change your grade. Briefing your cases The rule here is "Condense, condense, condense." Nothing's more pathetic than the law nerd whose brief is longer than the case excerpt in the casebook. Remember this rule: Each case has one or two main ideas. Find them, and you'll have what you need to know for the exam. And good, *brief* briefs can be easily incorporated in your study outline. Some professors like to ask tricky questions about the fact pattern of a case during the lecture, but don't write these details down. Instead, make notes in the margin or highlight key facts of your casebook. If you've read the case, you should be able to remember the facts long enough to get through the class period. And if the professor stresses a particular type of fact pattern in the lecture, he's signalling to you a possible exam issue. Note the issue, not the facts of the particular case. Buying study aids Basically, there are two types of study aids you can buy for first- year courses: commercial outlines and hornbooks. A commercial outline is a prepackaged, detailed skeleton of the material you need to know for a particular course. There are several brands of outlines, and each has something to recommend it. The Legalines outlines track particular casebooks, while the Emanuel Law Outlines and Gilbert Law Summaries are more general, although they will include many of the cases in your casebook. You may find it best to buy Legalines outlines for each of your courses except contracts. (The UT professors who wrote the contracts casebook designed it in a way that makes it difficult to produce a commercial outline for it.) Then you can supplement the Legalines with general-purpose outlines like Emanuel's and Gilbert's for courses you're having trouble with. Be aware that occasionally the case summaries and discussions in the commercial outlines are *mistaken*-- let your professor and your classmates supplement your take on a given case or issue. Some students buy "hornbooks" for particular subjects, but for a first-year student the treatises often go into too much unnecessary detail. Theyre also very expensive, and in general it's best not to buy them; but you may want to make an exception for contracts, which many students find a particularly subtle and difficult branch of law. The Calamari and Perillo hornbook is good for general contract law, while the White and Summers hornbook is necessary for a thorough understanding of the parts of your contracts course that deal with the Uniform Commercial Code. You may also want to consult UT Professor Charles Alan Wright's treatise on the law of federal courts for your civil-procedure class. Finally, if you signed up early for a bar-review course (believe it or not, some people do this during their first year), some bar-review courses will allow you to "check out" their reviews of black-letter law. Study Groups Try to get into one. When you find a likely group, make sure that most of the people in the group are dedicated enough to stick with it. Discussing difficult ideas with other law students is a good way of making sure you understand them. In general, study groups work best with about five people, with each person concentrating on one of the five first-year courses you'll be taking each semester. If you have a choice about which course to concentrate on, choose the course you think you'll find most difficult; your responsibility to your friends in the study group will give you an added incentive to master that material. Computers Buy a computer--you can purchase them at near-wholesale cost at the Texas Union MicroCenter on 21st Street. Only if you own a computer will you be able to produce and edit a legible course outline in a hurry. You'll need two types of software: a good word processing program to help you with the briefs and memos you have to produce for your legal research and writing seminar, and an outline program to produce the course outlines you'll need for exams. (Some word processors include outlining capability--in general, those word processors are not as good at outlining as programs designed for just that purpose.) If you buy a Macintosh, the outlining software of choice is MORE; if you own an IBM PC, buy Thinktank or Grandview.. Both products are available at local computer stores. Exam-taking strategy Your heart's beating rapidly, your palms are sweaty, and your mind is a blank. Yes, you're taking your first law-school exam. How on earth do you handle those exam questions? The first thing to remember is that all law-exam questions are more or less alike. Each describes an invented and often quite complex situation that, had it occurred in real life, would probably generate one or more lawsuits. Following the fact situation is usually a question or instruction such as "Describe the potential legal claims and liabilities of each party." Your best strategy, when you outline your answer, is to pretend you're the lawyer for each party in turn. Pretending to be Smith's lawyer, quickly list all the legal principles from your course outline that could advance Smith's case against Jones. Now play the part of Jones' lawyer how would you answer each of these legal arguments or claims? What counterclaims could you use against Smith? What will Smith say in response to your responses? What other parties in the fact situation could sue or be sued? And so on. Inevitably, you'll see some obvious legal issues in the fact pattern. You have to deal with them, of course, but don't make the fatal mistake of assuming that by handling the obvious or major issues you've written a good exam answer. After all, your peers probably share your gift for seeing the obvious. So, how do you make sure you catch the subtle issues as well as the straightforward ones? When you're preparing for the exam, condense your outline into a checklist of one- or two-word shorthand expressions for legal principles. Memorize the checklist, and recite it in your head each time you pretend to be the attorney for one of the parties. (Better yet--write it down on your scratch paper at the beginning of your exam as soon as you're allowed to start writing, before you even read the first question. The checklist will remind you of issues you'd otherwise overlook. Practice Exams Besides creating a legal-issues outline, the best way to prepare for exams is to take practice exams. Almost all professors keep their old exams on file in the lbirary. After you've done the bulk of your study outlines, photocopy your professors' exams from the last couple of years. Then sit down with a friend and practice outlining exams answers based on the old questions. Don't bother writing a full exam answer! Time yourself, and give yourself about as much time to outline each answer as you would during a real exam. YOu should budget about a third of the time you're given to answer an essay question for outlining your answer (e.g., 20 minutes for a 60-minute question). After each question, compare your outlined answer with your friend's. He or she will have seen some points you missed, and vice versa. This pinpoints issues you may tend to overlook during the real exam. Other matters Four of your first-year law courses -- contracts, torts, civil procedure, and property -- will last your entire first year. You'll also take two semester-long courses: criminal law in the fall and constitutional law in the spring. Thus, if you have to concentrate on any particular exam during winter midterms, concentrate on criminal law; that's the only exam you'll take in your first semester that counts as a grade for an entire course. Conversely, the exam for the three-hour constitutional-law course in the spring will count less toward your average than the exams for your year-long courses, which are each worth five or six hours' credit. Don't get too competitive. It's the friends you make during your first few months as a law student who'll help you get through the year. Don't be deluded into thinking that other students are the enemy; they're not. It's the system you've got to beat, and you can do it with the right attitude. A vicious competitive streak, however, tends to undermine your karma in the long run. Finally, try to enjoy yourself. The law really can be fun to learn if you let yourself relax. Most people who make it through the first year look back at it as a time of rapid intellectual growth and the building of mental discipline. Don't regard law school as just the stepping-stone to a career. A law-school education has value in itself -- it will teach you a lot about what makes our society tick.