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Aspiring Lawyers - Applications & General Advice
Solicitors Qualifying Exam (SQE) Forum
SQE Tell-all: All questions welcome
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<blockquote data-quote="WillKitchen" data-source="post: 217999" data-attributes="member: 41829"><p>As a university lecturer, I'm probably coming at SQE prep from an unusual perspective. The way I learn any subject with confidence is to create my own learning materials, as if I was going to teach the subject to others. Early career academics often have to learn subjects at the last minute and teach them as if we were lifelong experts!</p><p></p><p>For the last 6 months I've been reading the Revise SQE books and translating the core content into lectures - as if I was teaching modules on these subjects for a Law degree. So far I have covered Wills and Estates, the Legal System of England and Wales, Constitutional Law, Business Law and Tort. I am just moving onto Contract Law. For each subject I have produced about 60-80 PowerPoint slides with just the key info that needs memorising. I am starting to use these as digital revision cards, and take them with me on walks. </p><p></p><p>I will probably need to pick up the pace if I hope to sit SQE 1 in July 2026. Although I am also just starting a 40-week SQE 1 Prep Course with Barbri, which should complement my independent studies and set a reasonable schedule.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="WillKitchen, post: 217999, member: 41829"] As a university lecturer, I'm probably coming at SQE prep from an unusual perspective. The way I learn any subject with confidence is to create my own learning materials, as if I was going to teach the subject to others. Early career academics often have to learn subjects at the last minute and teach them as if we were lifelong experts! For the last 6 months I've been reading the Revise SQE books and translating the core content into lectures - as if I was teaching modules on these subjects for a Law degree. So far I have covered Wills and Estates, the Legal System of England and Wales, Constitutional Law, Business Law and Tort. I am just moving onto Contract Law. For each subject I have produced about 60-80 PowerPoint slides with just the key info that needs memorising. I am starting to use these as digital revision cards, and take them with me on walks. I will probably need to pick up the pace if I hope to sit SQE 1 in July 2026. Although I am also just starting a 40-week SQE 1 Prep Course with Barbri, which should complement my independent studies and set a reasonable schedule. [/QUOTE]
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Solicitors Qualifying Exam (SQE) Forum
SQE Tell-all: All questions welcome
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