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Aspiring Lawyers - Applications & General Advice
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LPC Help?
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<blockquote data-quote="hd112211" data-source="post: 78363" data-attributes="member: 10924"><p>Just to add my two cents, having completed the LPC late last year (initially in person, but switched to distance once the pandemic hit).</p><p></p><p>Reading and taking notes is down to personal preference I think. Everyone has a slightly different best practice, so do what works for you. Do remember that there are various help guides and note packs out there which summarise the key points.</p><p></p><p>However when it comes to the open book exams, I would definitely recommend leveraging your notes as much as possible. Of course there is a lot of content within each module of the LPC so organising your notes and knowing exactly where everything is located is absolutely key.</p><p>What worked for me was to divide and label topics within a module and colour code the categories of knowledge. For example within Business Law & Practice, Board meetings, I would colour code and label the case study examples one colour, key knowledge another colour, and precedents another colour.</p><p>I then created an index of all the topics listing all the categories within for quick reference. </p><p></p><p>If you have your notes all digitally, then a index/contents page is useful with built in links to each page, making it quick and easy to search and jump to specific parts.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="hd112211, post: 78363, member: 10924"] Just to add my two cents, having completed the LPC late last year (initially in person, but switched to distance once the pandemic hit). Reading and taking notes is down to personal preference I think. Everyone has a slightly different best practice, so do what works for you. Do remember that there are various help guides and note packs out there which summarise the key points. However when it comes to the open book exams, I would definitely recommend leveraging your notes as much as possible. Of course there is a lot of content within each module of the LPC so organising your notes and knowing exactly where everything is located is absolutely key. What worked for me was to divide and label topics within a module and colour code the categories of knowledge. For example within Business Law & Practice, Board meetings, I would colour code and label the case study examples one colour, key knowledge another colour, and precedents another colour. I then created an index of all the topics listing all the categories within for quick reference. If you have your notes all digitally, then a index/contents page is useful with built in links to each page, making it quick and easy to search and jump to specific parts. [/QUOTE]
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