ABLS Exam Tips
ABLS Exam Tips
ABLS Exam Tips
1 _ ANALYSIS:
• Eliminate the following words from your vocabulary: "Clearly" "Obviously" "Of
Course" ''Naturally'' "Certainly"
• Replace those words with the following: ''Likely'' ''Reasonably'' ''May Have" "May
Be" "Suggests"
* Example1: ''The issue is whether the defendant was negligent. (ISSUE) In order to
establish negligence, there must be a duty, a breach of that duty, causation, and damages.
(RULE) ,As a matter of law, we all owe a general duty of care to reasonably foreseeable
. plaintiffs whenever we act. (RULE on DUTY) Here, the facts show that [discuss facts that show
, a dury]. However, the defendant may argue that a duty does not exist because [discuss facts that
show no duty owed]. Nevertheless [discuss facts or legal doctrines that break the tie one wqy or the otheTj
which strongly suggests that the plaintiff was reasonably foreseeable to the defendant.
(ANALYSIS) Therefore, a court will likely find that there was a duty owed to the plaintiff.
(CONCLUSION) The next issue is whether the defendant breached his duty to the
plaintiff. (ISSUE) A duty is breached when an actor fails to meet the standard of care under
the circumstances. (RULE on BREACH) Here, the fact that the defendant used an ABC
tool instead of the customary XYZ tool tends to suggest that the defendant may have
breached his duty ... " [repeat !RAe steps]
The 5 Page Cheat Sheet for Writing Law School Exams
Conway Ekpo, Esq. - Rutgers MSP Class of 2007 - [email protected]
* Example2: "The issue is whether there was an enforceable contract (ISSUE) A valid·
contract is fonned when there is an offer to enter into an agreement manifested by one
party, an acceptance of that offer manifested by another party indicating a commitment to
be bound, and adequate consideration given by both parties. (RULE) Additionally, there
must be no defenses to fonnation that would invalidate an otherwise valid contract, such as
the statute of frauds. (RULE CLARIFICATION) Here, Bob placed an order with Sell that
listed the necessary material tenns of price, quantity, and dates for perfonnance ... "[discuss
facts on both sides regarding whether or not (i) the offer element is esttJblishe~ then discuss (ii) the acceptance
element, then discuss (iii) the consideration element, then discuss (iv) any difenses to the contractformation,
then conclude if there was a valid contract or no4
HOW THE PROFESSOR SEES IT - This student sees the issues, which is good, but
they don't do the analysis. They just say A will argue this, but B will argue that, and they
never ANALYZE either side. Notice they never make a CONCLUSION about either side
either. They just keep pointing out what each side would argue. This is the #1 pitfall for law
students who think that they are "arguing both sides." You are not arguing either side this
way, you are merdy pointing out the issues on both sides.
Stick to the facts. Don't say, "well IF this would have been different" ... .its not different.
Stickto the facts.
However, distinguish this bad idea of arbitrarily editing how things would have been under
DIFFERENT FACTS from a good answer that points out how a case may have been
decided differently under different doctrines, such as if MPC applies in Crim Law, or if U CC
applies in Contracts, or if the Restatements approach to Torts or Property is persuasive.
Those are good "IF's". Changing the facts is a bad "IF".
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