Preparing For The Law School Classroom
Preparing For The Law School Classroom
Preparing For The Law School Classroom
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Since law is legal reasoning for decision-making with an emphasis on issue
spotting and making an advocacy argument to resolve each issue, it isn't enough to
understand the basic skills listed below in an abstract way, as simply knowledge or even
understanding alone. Remember that a skill is a capacity for performance of your
understanding, and not simply an abstract understanding or plain knowledge as in many
college programs. For numerous students, these skills can only be developed by practice
over weeks or months, sometimes many months. The path is from knowledge to
understanding to the critical task of performing your understanding.
3.What then are the basic skills that are essential for legal reasoning?
They include the skills specified below for law exams (that are also writ large for
Practice). They are:
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• Writing out all of the above in a lawyerly argument, and sometimes writing out
two or three arguments arising from identical facts.
Legal reasoning is circular. The essential skills are like strands in a tapestry: they
interconnect and overlap. Hence, while these skills can be individually identified and
analyzed, they must be practiced and learned as a configuration. In addition to these skills,
legal reasoning also requires an array of skills for decoding the appellate cases you discuss
in class.
Indeed, many of your professors will react negatively to student responses that
embody these "frequencies" of knowledge and analysis. The reason is that they want first
to orient you to a legal frequency of vocabulary, concepts and analysis. Most therefore
initially seek to have you read, think, talk and write like a lawyer, not like a philosopher,
ethicist, sociologist, researcher or politician. Since your teachers are not fools, however, at
least some of them may later stress how law, of course, is forged in a maelstrom of
history, politics, economics, culture, etc. At first, however, most will insist on a technical
legal formulation and analysis.
6. You don't emphasize knowledge. I thought going to law school meant "learning the
law"?
Not true. Not in the sense of defining the learning of law as mostly a series of rules,
principles and policies to be memorized and regurgitated upon proper factual cue. Not in
the sense of seeing a law student and a lawyer as human computers to be programmed
(stuffed) with thousands of statutes and cases in thirty or more areas of law.
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The knowledge and understanding that will help you is that which empowers you to
extricate the key facts, spot issues, select rules, interweave, use policy as appropriate, and
make lawyerly oral and written arguments. Thus, it is not isolated knowledge in itself that
will help you, but rather knowledge and understanding that is filtered through these core
skills. Knowledge and understanding are not ends in themselves but rather a means to the
end of performing your understanding in arguments to resolve issues. Thus, they are
absolutely necessary threshold requirements but also insufficient. The false and misleading
idea that law and its learning is primarily a matter of memorizing and regurgitating as in
may college programs is a classic, first-year blunder. Avoid it.
7. I know that I understand the cases and other materials because I can talk well
about them. Do you agree?
Not necessarily. Talking can be quite useful but also misleading about what you
actually know and understand. The word "know" masks many meanings. For example, you
can know in the sense of only being able to recognize. The meaning of "know," however,
that is critical for exams is being able to spot issues and resolve each one with a concise
advocacy argument. If you can't do this, you definitely do not know the materials since you
can't perform your knowledge and understanding.
8. I find some of the cases confusing and inconsistent. What should I do?
There are at least three possibilities. The first is that, as a beginner, you are
confused, not the cases. As you learn more, you will "see" more in the relevant chain of
cases, and they will become clear. Review your class notes too for your professor's
comments and read the relevant hornbook sections. Discuss your confusion with other
students. Work at clarification. The second possibility is that the confusion is not with you,
but rather is in the case itself. Some cases are a model of lawyerly analysis; some are well
argued; some are distinctly routine or mediocre; others are confusing with poor issue
articulation matched by hard-to-defend rule application, and compounded by obscure or
aberrational reasoning.
This reality of sharply different case quality is surprising only if someone has a
beginner's false expectation about the legal process. Once you realize that cases are decided
and argued by judges with varying legal perspectives and competence who must exercise
judgment about facts, issues, and rules, it should be apparent that a wide range of human
reactions is possible. The third possibility is that your professor is inept in teaching some
or more of the cases. What is needed is the beginning of a critical perspective towards
cases and professors: a lawyer's pleasure at the well-crafted, well-reasoned case and
insightful class presentation, and at the other end of the spectrum, a lawyer's displeasure at
the badly crafted, poorly reasoned case or teaching. With the gradual emergence of this
critical perspective, you'll be better able to spot aberrational, misleading, confusing cases or
teaching, and you will not rely on them. You'll not allow them to confuse you. You'll find
as much clarity as possible in other materials
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9. Should I prepare for the first year before actually beginning?
Definitely. Do as much as you can, but do it smart. You'll be pleased later. As noted
above, see Planet Law School II by Atticus Falcon for numerous specific recommendations
as to how to do this most efficiently and effectively. Very impressively, he has ploughed
through the great mass of materials for beginning students and evaluated their sharply
varying levels of usefulness. Follow the detailed schedule that is appropriate for you.