There is a measure of unease in studying in law school. Nearly fifteen weeks of class, reading, and outlining. And it all comes down to a few hours, a number of essays, and possibly a few multiple choice questions. And then the past few months are summed up by a solitary number, a single letter–garnished, perhaps by a symbol.  And from there you fit into a rank of your class.  Upper half, bottom third, top five percentile…a new identity–even if short-lived–is yours.

And sure, there are practice law school exams and answers, but how can you really know how a law professor will grade. We mean really know.  Because in the end, who your professor is and what they are looking for, matters more than just a little in the parallel law school universe.

We’ve been working around the clock at FindLaw to shed some light on the subject.  And we think you’ll like what we found…

  • Top 7 Law School Study Aids (FindLaw’s Greedy Associates)The Power of Free: FindLaw’s Cases & Codes for Law Students
  • & Associates (FindLaw’s Greedy Associates)Law School Outlines in 2.0 : What Wiki Can Do For You
  • (FindLaw’s Greedy Associates)21 Serious, Creative, & Crazy Study Spots for Law Students
  • (FindLaw’s Greedy Associates)10 Funny Tees for Law Students in 2010 (FindLaw’s Greedy
  • Associates)

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