[blindLaw] Bar Study?

Singh, Nandini NSingh at cov.com
Wed May 6 15:57:04 UTC 2020


Maybe 10- weeks exactly. I seem to remember starting shortly after 3L finals and kept going till a couple of days before the exam. I will admit you may want to give yourself 12-14 weeks. I know I did not get to do any essay practice for the multi-state, but I had enough confidence that I could imitate the style based on the sample essays that I had read. Literature major here, so I felt I could handle it. As it turned out, my task was to compose a client letter, which is one of the simpler styles to dash off during an exam.

 
-----Original Message-----
From: BlindLaw <blindlaw-bounces at nfbnet.org> On Behalf Of Seif-Eldeen Saqallah via BlindLaw
Sent: Wednesday, May 6, 2020 11:32 AM
To: Blind Law Mailing List <blindlaw at nfbnet.org>
Cc: Seif-Eldeen Saqallah <seifs at umich.edu>
Subject: Re: [blindLaw] Bar Study?

[EXTERNAL]

Thank you; that is very helpful. I will make sure to checkout the review modules once I start.

Around how much time did you give yourself to study; more or less than the recommended? 10 weeks?


On 5/6/20, Singh, Nandini via BlindLaw <blindlaw at nfbnet.org> wrote:
> I used Barbri for the July 2015 administration of the NY exam and had 
> a good experience with them. I think to start things off, I let my 
> Barbri rep know that I wanted to speak to the accommodations team at 
> or after 3L finals, set up a phone call, and described how I studied 
> in order to craft the best kind of acommodations for me. Most things I 
> could access fine. The biggest concern I initially had was getting the 
> actual legal topic summaries and the workbooks with exercises/drills. 
> Barbri made them all available to me either as PDF or Word 
> documents--really cannot recall which now--and uploaded them onto Drop 
> Box. It was no problem downloading them and using them throughout the 
> course. The accommodations team I thought was very responsive and 
> helpful for the couple of follow-up questions I had following our 
> introductory phone call, e.g. an essay exercise was not accessible, 
> but Barbri provided a Barbri tutor, who worked with me for that discrete aspect.
>
> As for studying for the bar, treat it like a full time job. You should 
> spend about 7-9 hours studying. In the evening, make sure you do 
> something totally unrelated to law and preferably physical. I think I 
> ended up watching a lot of wildlife documentaries, and often a family 
> member took me on a moderately long drive around our suburb to relax. 
> I scaled back studying on the weekends, maybe four hours or less. 
> Barbri is good in giving you a schedule that will put the fear of god 
> into you but that will actually allow you to pass. You just have to be disciplined and stick to the plan.
>
> One other thing that I found super helpful was completing, sometimes 
> multiple times, the online review modules for various legal topics. 
> These were quick and had concise explanations that really cemented the 
> major concepts--kind of like dynamic, virtual flash cards. I do not 
> think the modules are a standard part of the curriculum, but they are 
> worth trying out once or twice.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: BlindLaw <blindlaw-bounces at nfbnet.org> On Behalf Of Seif-Eldeen 
> Saqallah via BlindLaw
> Sent: Wednesday, May 6, 2020 10:45 AM
> To: Blind Law Mailing List <blindlaw at nfbnet.org>
> Cc: Seif-Eldeen Saqallah <seifs at umich.edu>
> Subject: [blindLaw] Bar Study?
>
> [EXTERNAL]
>
> Hello all,
>
> I might begin studying for the bar this summer. (I might take two: one 
> UBE and another Michigan state bar.) I will be using Barbri. Any 
> recommendations for additional resources; study methods; 
> accessibility/accommodations things for which to ask/of which to be aware; ETC?
>
> Peace and thank you,
> Seif
>
>
> --
> Seif Saqallah
> (Pronouns: he/him/his.)
> University of Michigan
> Juris Doctor/
> Masters in Middle Eastern and North African Studies J.D/M.A Candidate 
> |
> 2021
>
> International studies, Arabic Studies, and Judaic Studies; Law, 
> Justice, and Social Change B.A | 2017
>
> 248-325-7091
> seifs at umich.edu
>
> Student Attorney | International Transactions Clinic University of 
> Michigan Law School
> 3120 Jeffries Hall
> 701 South State Street
> Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109
> www.law.umich.edu/ITC
>
> The information in this transmittal (including attachments, if any) is 
> confidential and may contain privileged information. If you are not 
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--
Seif Saqallah
(Pronouns: he/him/his.)
University of Michigan
Juris Doctor/
Masters in Middle Eastern and North African Studies J.D/M.A Candidate | 2021

International studies, Arabic Studies, and Judaic Studies; Law, Justice, and Social Change B.A | 2017

248-325-7091
seifs at umich.edu

Student Attorney | International Transactions Clinic University of Michigan Law School
3120 Jeffries Hall
701 South State Street
Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109
www.law.umich.edu/ITC

The information in this transmittal (including attachments, if any) is confidential and may contain privileged information. If you are not the intended recipient and have received this transmittal in error, please notify the sender immediately by reply email, delete this communication, and destroy all copies of the transmittal (including attachments, if any).

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