Posts tagged as:

California

Jun
29

Adam Ferber is the former Examinations Director for the State Bar of California and grader of 40 California Bar and First-Year Law Students’ Examinations.  He provides intensive, individualized tutoring and coaching to applicants for both exams, as well as counseling and advocacy for applicants appealing their unsuccessful exam results. Contact Adam at www.ferberbarreview.com or on Facebook at Ferber Bar Review – Student Resource Group.

“He who laughs has not yet heard the bad news.”  Bertolt Brecht

“If one studies too zealously, one easily loses his pants.” Albert Einstein

The Almost Daily Word has lately been giving you the straight skinny on the subtle and not-so-subtle signs that you could fail the California Bar Exam, and on how to decrease that risk.   You can make yourself stronger, smarter, more strategic and better prepared for what’s ahead.

Here’s another risk avoidance technique for your tool box:

Study smarter – and keep your pants on!

Almost all the Bar Exam applicants I’ve met, be they first-timers or repeaters, study “pedal-to-the-metal,” “24-7″ right up to exam time.   They are all in danger of losing their pants.

Hal Pashler and Doug Roher, psychology professors and frequent collaborators, are fascinated by how people learn and remember.  In their article Increasing Retention Without Increasing Study Time (2007 – Current Directions of Psychological Science) they examined two well known but poorly understood study questions:  How long should one study the same material before quitting or shifting to new material, and how should a fixed amount of study time be distributed across study sessions?  What they found should be a lesson to you.

-           Know When to Quit

Say you’ve devoted a study session to understanding better the various degrees of murder.  After an hour, you’ve been able to answer every multiple choice question you can access on the topic without error. Still, you’re concerned about forgetting what you’ve learned. Should you immediately go over the material one more time?

According to Pashler and Roher, if the Bar Exam is more than a week away, the answer is probably no.  They call this continued studying of the same topic “overlearning,” or “massing.”  For about a week, it produces better test results. But soon after that gains decline rapidly. Eventually, they are undetectable.

-           Spacing Instead of Massing

There is a better alternative to massing: spread the total amount of study time on one topic across two study sessions separated by an interval.  This  is called “spacing,” and the improvement it makes on test results is considerable.  “Final test performance,” say Pashler and Roher, ” depends heavily on the duration of the spacing gap, with too-brief gaps causing poorer performance than excessively long gaps.”

In two separate experiments, the professors fixed the amount of time they allowed their student-subjects to study. However, they varied what they called the “Inter-[study]-session Interval” (the “ISI”), the amount of time between study sessions.  Then they measured how much of what they studied the students retained, and for how long.

In their first experiment, ISI’s varied between 5 minutes and 14 days.  A one-day ISI produced the greatest improvement in test scores.  In their second, where the students were asked to remember the names of a number of very obscure objects, they varied the ISI from 5 minutes to 6 months!  Longer intervals produced even better results in the amount and duration of retention.  The optimum ISI was 1 month!

Pashler and Roher concluded that “…[P]owerful spacing effects occur over all practically meaningful time periods. … [F]inal test performance depends heavily on the spacing gaps, with too brief gaps causing poorer performance than excessively long gaps.”

-           The Take-Away

-           Limit and optimize the time that you study a discrete topic.  It’s time to quit when you have attained a reasonable (even if temporary) mastery of that limited topic.

-           Study a separate topic (or topics) before you return to where you started.  Or, better yet, take a break!  With time and practice you should be able to approximate your own ISI.

Use of these study techniques may be the key, both to a successful bar exam result AND to keeping your pants on.

Copyright 2011 Adam Ferber and www.ferberbarreview.com.  Reprinted by permission.

{ 2 comments }

Jun
13

Adam Ferber is the former Examinations Director for the State Bar of California and grader of 40 California Bar and First-Year Law Students’ Examinations.  He provides intensive, individualized tutoring and coaching to applicants for both exams, as well as counseling and advocacy for applicants appealing their unsuccessful exam results. Contact Adam at www.ferberbarreview.com or on Facebook at Ferber Bar Review – Student Resource Group.

“He who laughs has not yet heard the bad news.”  Bertolt Brecht

In Parts One and Two of this installment of the Almost Daily Word, you got the straight skinny on the subtle and not-so-subtle signs that you could fail the California Bar Exam.  Still reading? Good for you.  You can’t change the past.  But you can make yourself stronger, smarter, more strategic and better prepared for what’s ahead. We’re onto the How of it and have already discussed learning styles.  Here are some “know thyself” questions you may not have considered.

-           What kind of personality do I have? I’m not talking just about whether you’re outgoing or shy.  Your personality is the complex of the behavioral, temperamental, emotional and mental attributes that make you the unique person that you are.

The Myers-Briggs Type Indicator is an assessment of how you perceive the world and make decisions.  Despite differences in opinion concerning its validity among experts, it may be the world’s most widely used personality assessment.  You can fill out a questionnaire on line that will help you understand which of 16 personality types you are and what that can mean to your Bar Exam preparation.

-        What is my emotional style? “Flow” is the positive psychology first proposed by Professor Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi.  In a nutshell, it is a feeling of confident and single-minded immersion in a task.  When you have it you feel energized, joyful and “dialed in” to what you are doing.  You can achieve it for all or part of the Bar Exam, but to do so you’ll need to harness not only your intellect but your emotions.  So, what is your emotional style?  Do you operate best when you are calm or when you are stimulated? Do you prepare best when you are reassured (say, by the presence of a teacher or mentor) or when you are a little nervous? How can you adjust your preparation to your emotional style bring out your flow at crunch time.

-           Could I have an undiagnosed learning, or other, disability? Several times, on a hunch, I’ve asked my students who took the bar exam without accommodation whether they thought they might be learning-disabled. All of them admitted that they had.  Some eventually documented, applied for and received accommodation, with good results.  How to deal with a learning disability is a highly personal choice.  Please remember though: If you have a disability, appropriate accommodation on the Bar Examination is a right that the law guaranties to you.

Not feeling any better after reading all this?  Don’t abandon hope.  More strategies are on their way in this installment of The Almost Daily Word.

 

Copyright 2011 Adam Ferber and www.ferberbarreview.com.  Reprinted by permission.

{ 1 comment }

Jun
10

Adam Ferber is the former Examinations Director for the State Bar of California and grader of 40 California Bar and First-Year Law Students’ Examinations.  He provides intensive, individualized tutoring and coaching to applicants for both exams, as well as counseling and advocacy for applicants appealing their unsuccessful exam results. Contact Adam at www.ferberbarreview.com or on Facebook at Ferber Bar Review – Student Resource Group.

“He who laughs has not yet heard the bad news.”  Bertolt Brecht

Part One of this installment of The Almost Daily Word of Wisdom considered whether exam-related statistics put you at risk of failing the California Bar Examination.

Those whom the statistics favor may deserve a small sigh of relief.  But don’t make your swearing in ceremony plans quite yet.  There’s still this “gut check” to make: four questions that only you can answer.

1-         How were your written exam grades in law school?

Law school and – yes – even bar exam essay questions vary widely in difficulty.  The statistics geeks among you won’t be surprised to know that every American bar examination’s statistical reliability derives from the MBE.  Nonetheless, most California Bar essay questions are originally written by out-of-state law professors for their own students.  You may have reason for concern come bar exam time if your law school essay grades fluctuated, were consistently mediocre or got worse regardless of your non-essay based grades.  And guess what: You need to be able to write a performance test too!

2-         How many clinical courses did you take in law school that required extensive writing?

This is just me, a lawyer for 36 years who writes every day, as well as a bar grader and exam director for 20 years. But I see a direct correlation between good performance test writing and good legal writing.   The Performance Test’s vaunted “persuasive memo” and a”real world” points and authorities in support of a motion in for summary judgment have much more in common than you may think.  If you haven’t written some real world “P’s and A’s” as a law student, you could be going into the exam at a disadvantage.

3-         What percentage of the case law that was covered in law school did you actually brief?

As they are expressed in bar exam answer, legal knowledge and legal reasoning are discrete but interdependent variables.  Over the course of grading 20 general bar exams, I saw answers all the time that displayed impressive rote legal knowledge but insufficient reasoning to “connect the dots.”   With insufficient analytical ability when you write an answer all you’re doing is playing the notes – you need to reason like a lawyer to play a song.  So if all you’ve been doing for the past three or four years is memorizing rules and holdings without the curiosity about how they relate that helps you brief a judicial case, you could lack a crucial skill.

4-         (For repeaters only) – How’d you do on the MBE?

I work with many repeat takers, some for more than one administration of the exam.  The ones I’d put my money on to pass on the next go-round have already achieved MBE scores at or above the “cut line.”  This shouldn’t come as a surprise.  The MBE is the most statistically reliable of the three measures of legal knowledge and ability (essays and performance tests being the other two) on most bar exams.  The higher your  MBE scores on your last exam were, the more likely it is that all you’ll need to pass is a writing tune-up.  But if those MBE scores are low, improving your writing will only get you half-way there.

There’s Hope

Seeing yourself in any of these at-risk categories can’t be comfortable.  There is hope however.  Remember that you got yourself into and through college, and then into and through law school.  Not easy, especially if you were working a job or raising a family along the way. You’ve got skills!

Moreover, there are things you can do to reduce your risk of failing and ease your mind.  The Almost Daily Word of Wisdom will have some suggestions in Part 3.

 

Copyright 2011 Adam Ferber and www.ferberbarreview.com.  Reprinted by permission.

{ 1 comment }

The Value of Rewriting

Adam Ferber is the former Examinations Director for the State Bar of California and grader of 40 California Bar and First-Year Law Students’ Examinations.  He provides intensive, individualized tutoring and coaching to applicants for both exams, as well as counseling and advocacy for applicants appealing their unsuccessful exam results. Contact Adam at www.ferberbarreview.com or on Facebook at [...]

Read the full article →

Failing the California Bar Examination – Are You At Risk? Part One – Consider These Statistics

Adam Ferber is the former Examinations Director for the State Bar of California and grader of 40 California Bar and First-Year Law Students’ Examinations.  He provides intensive, individualized tutoring and coaching to applicants for both exams, as well as counseling and advocacy for applicants appealing their unsuccessful exam results. Contact Adam at www.ferberbarreview.com or on Facebook at [...]

Read the full article →

Myths about Graders

Adam Ferber is the former Examinations Director for the State Bar of California and grader of 40 California Bar and First-Year Law Students’ Examinations.  He provides intensive, individualized tutoring and coaching to applicants for both exams, as well as counseling and advocacy for applicants appealing their unsuccessful exam results. Contact Adam at www.ferberbarreview.com or on Facebook at [...]

Read the full article →

The Value of Failing the California Bar Examination – The Value of Failing, Period

Adam Ferber is the former Examinations Director for the State Bar of California and grader of 40 California Bar and First-Year Law Students’ Examinations.  He provides intensive, individualized tutoring and coaching to applicants for both exams, as well as counseling and advocacy for applicants appealing their unsuccessful exam results. Contact Adam at www.ferberbarreview.com or on Facebook at [...]

Read the full article →

Should You Appeal Your Unsuccessful Bar Result?

Adam Ferber is the former Examinations Director for the State Bar of California and grader of 40 California Bar and First-Year Law Students’ Examinations.  He provides intensive, individualized tutoring and coaching to applicants for both exams, as well as counseling and advocacy for applicants appealing their unsuccessful exam results. Contact Adam at www.ferberbarreview.com or on Facebook at [...]

Read the full article →

Bar Exam Results : February 2011 : California

California will release results of the February 2011 Bar Exam on Friday, May 13, 2011.  Results will be mailed to applicants.  Applicants will be able to access the pass list that evening, beginning at 6:00 p.m.  PST using their applicant number and file number.  The pass list will be available to the public beginning Sunday, [...]

Read the full article →

Can You Predict What Questions Will Be on the California Bar Examination? Part 1 – Essay Questions

Adam Ferber is the former Examinations Director for the State Bar of California and grader of 40 California Bar and First-Year Law Students’ Examinations.  He provides intensive, individualized tutoring and coaching to applicants for both exams, as well as counseling and advocacy for applicants appealing their unsuccessful exam results. Contact Adam at www.ferberbarreview.com or on Facebook at [...]

Read the full article →
Bar Exam Brief, News and tools to help you study for and pass the bar exam.

Copyright © 2012 Multistate Edge

All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy