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How to Prepare for the Bar Exam: 3 Pillars of Bar Prep

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Studicata provides a fresher, more relatable way to prep for law school finals and the bar exam. With toprated video lectures, exam walkthrough videos, outlines, study guides, strategy guides, essay practice exams, multiplechoice assessments, performance tracking, and more—Studicata has you covered with everything you need to ace your finals and pass the bar exam with confidence.

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VIDEO INFO

How to Prepare for the Bar Exam: 3 Pillars of Bar Prep

Pillar #1: Prioritize

The bar exam is a MASSIVE test. It requires you to review an unprecedented amount of material in a very short period of time. In fact, in a typical 8week bar prep review period, you will only have 45 days to review each subject that is tested on the bar exam. Often, this comes as a shock to students who are used to devoting an entire semester of law school to only 23 subjects at a time.

To overcome this shock and avoid drowning in informationoverload, you need to PRIORITIZE your bar prep in the most efficient manner possible. Unfortunately, most commercial bar prep companies don’t provide any resources to help students prioritize or develop a plan of attack; instead opting to throw textbooks of information at students with little guidance as to how to digest it all in a manageable way.

So, how do you cut through the swathes of bar prep material out there and develop your own plan of attack? In short, you need focus your study time on the most frequently tested and highestyielding areas of law in each subject.

To help students with this, we provide a free top 120 list that lays out the 120 most frequently tested rules from each subject of the bar exam over the last 20 years. This project took us well over 1,000 hours of research to complete, and it is yours at nocost, completely for free.


Pillar #2: Practice

The first question we ask when someone tells us that they failed the bar exam is: "How many practice questions did you do under bar exam conditions?" Way too often, the answer is next to none, especially when it comes to practice essay questions. While we understand that virtually no one enjoys the tedium of working through prior bar exam questions, this is the absolute best way to learn the law and prepare for the bar exam.

You have to practice! Imagine showing up to your driver’s test having never driven a car. You would never do this. You can’t learn how to drive a car from reading a book or watching a video – you have to get behind the wheel and practice. The bar exam is no different. To become a good bar exam testtaker, you have to work through practice essays and multiplechoice questions as much as you possibly can.

As you work through questions and compare your answers to the model answers, you are going to learn the law in a much more meaningful way than you can get from reading a book or watching a lecture. Even if you think you don’t know the law well enough to practice – go for it anyway! You want to make mistakes during bar prep, so that you can learn from them and avoid making them again on exam day.


Pillar #3: Persist

The bar exam is an extremely stressful life event. There is enormous pressure to pass coming not only from yourself, but also from your friends, family, employers, and colleagues. Inevitably, you are going to experience highs and lows during bar prep as you deal with these pressures.

While it is not always easy, it is critical to remain as persistent as possible during the lows. Too often, we see students get discouraged from a practice session gone awry and check out. If you need to, take a break, recollect yourself – and get back on it! Remember, mistakes are merely learning opportunities. The more you make, the better. When in doubt, stick to your plan of attack, keep practicing, and never give up. After all, the bar exam is only a test.


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