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Aspiring Lawyers - Applications & General Advice
General Discussion
LPC (prep and legacy notes)
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<blockquote data-quote="OH" data-source="post: 84574" data-attributes="member: 1150"><p>Re tips, if it's closed book then memorise everything as you go along (i.e. relevant cases, which tabs in your statute books are for what, stock phrases you've been told to use for marks), as once you fall behind in the core modules it would be very difficult to catch up easily. If it's open book then focus on tabbing everything as you go along, I went 'into' the exam with every solution/handout/the legacy notes tabbed and highlighted so there was no question I couldn't immediately locate the answer to in <30 seconds. </p><p></p><p>For me personally, no content was conceptually difficult. The hard part is rote learning lots of information, but given it was open book that difficulty was removed. I initially spent 4 days a week on it (sat/sun prepping and then mon/tue doing the tutorials, rest doing tc applications) but after the first 3 weeks I realised the handouts/notes had everything so I just turned up to the tutorials on mon/tue with no prep and then added any extra information given to the legacy notes. One of the perks of it being online was that I also could attend none of the electives teaching live and instead took 3/5 teaching weeks off, watched most of the lectures back to back in week 4, did the past papers casually in week 5 + last few lectures, then took the exams. The skills are ticking boxes, just do exactly what they tell you to do and you'll score near full marks.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="OH, post: 84574, member: 1150"] Re tips, if it's closed book then memorise everything as you go along (i.e. relevant cases, which tabs in your statute books are for what, stock phrases you've been told to use for marks), as once you fall behind in the core modules it would be very difficult to catch up easily. If it's open book then focus on tabbing everything as you go along, I went 'into' the exam with every solution/handout/the legacy notes tabbed and highlighted so there was no question I couldn't immediately locate the answer to in <30 seconds. For me personally, no content was conceptually difficult. The hard part is rote learning lots of information, but given it was open book that difficulty was removed. I initially spent 4 days a week on it (sat/sun prepping and then mon/tue doing the tutorials, rest doing tc applications) but after the first 3 weeks I realised the handouts/notes had everything so I just turned up to the tutorials on mon/tue with no prep and then added any extra information given to the legacy notes. One of the perks of it being online was that I also could attend none of the electives teaching live and instead took 3/5 teaching weeks off, watched most of the lectures back to back in week 4, did the past papers casually in week 5 + last few lectures, then took the exams. The skills are ticking boxes, just do exactly what they tell you to do and you'll score near full marks. [/QUOTE]
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Aspiring Lawyers - Applications & General Advice
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LPC (prep and legacy notes)
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