Ace law school with 115 rules from a recent graduate who remembers the experience all too well. Do Away with Your Common Sense and Think Like a Lawyer Shake the Jitters Keep a Law School Journal Don't Fall in Love with Your Professor Accept That All of Your Professors May Not Like You Don't Agonize over Atrocious Grades Learn to Spot the Bad Professors (Types I and II) Scope Out the Smarty-Pants Keep Good Friends Make Lots of Whoopie! Take Soothing Baths Throw a Party Marion T.D. Lewis, a recent law school graduate, tells you exactly what you need to know to survive those hellish law school years. Ms. Lewis provides valuable insight into what your life will be like personally and professionally on and off campus, in class and out -- along with 115 rules and lots of simple advice guaranteed to help you become a well-rounded, happy, healthy, and successful law student. ???????? Here are the words of wisdom you'll need, dispensed in a sympathetic way, by one who remembers how it felt to sit in class and to be terrorized by difficult professors. This insider information covers a wide range of topics, from believing in yourself, studying, sizing up professors, dressing for success, and managing money to relaxing and having fun. ???????? Whether you're just starting law school or in your third year, this advice may well be your key to success, because surviving the paper chase takes much more than just hitting the law books!
Common Sense Need Not Be Exclusive From Law School Education
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 19 years ago
I got this book the summer before law school, the same summer I read Law School Confidential, Princeton Review's pre-law book, and anything else that might give me some insight into the mystifying process that is law school. I think that for me, this book might have been among the best of the lot. Most law school prep books overwhelm you; quite frankly they freak you out needlessly about law school with their cynicism. To make it worse, their advice is often cumbersome and difficult to follow. In contrast to those books, this book had a very refreshing style. It was brief, friendly, humorous and uncynical. Not only was it a comfort to pull out and read on occasion during my 1L year, it presented, in a friendly way, some very solid common sense advice. A good example was the exhortation to sign up with a bar review as soon as possible after entering law school - something some other law school prep books tell you not to do. It's true that a lot of it was stuff I could have talked to a 3L about on my own - but when I went to law school, well I didn't know anyone there. Remember your 1L year? No matter how friendly your school is, starting law school is an intimidating time. I thought this book demystified a few things I wound up having questions about later on, and it was right at my fingertips. Why I gave the book four stars: The advice is not supremely detailed, and though what it has is just fine, it could have done with some more detailed descriptions of study advice. (That's really the hardest thing to come by, is concrete and genuinely useful study advice - for non-robots and non-geniuses - for law school.) Also, there were some fluff tips the book didn't really need ("Make Lots of Whoopie"?). But even those little tidbits just added to the light and breezy tone of the book. And you don't get much light and breezy in law school! If you are heading off to law school - this is a nice book to get used. I gave my copy to a friend of mine who is now applying to law schools. But do try to get a copy or at least flip through it when you need to come down from the inevitable tension that law school can impose.
Helpful tidbits for people entering law school
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 23 years ago
This book isn't perfect, but it does have some great common sense advice. Definitely check this book out if you're entering law school. A lot of the info contained here, such as how to handle the stress, most people (such as myself) don't figure out until their third year.
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