Originally posted by ND
What do you usually have to do in exams and assessments throughout law?
They invariably include a problem question, where you need to demonstrate how effectively you can apply the law to the facts and so on. Occasionally an additional essay response is required as well, and tends to demand a critical analysis of one particular area of the law you've been studying.
UNSW 1998 Torts Exam -
http://www.law.unsw.edu.au/subjhome/LAWS1061/download/FinalExamS298.doc
Other examples -
www.lawskool.com.au
I guess I can post up one of my assignments if you want a real example.
Originally posted by ND
Also, if you're allowed to take in books, wouldn't that be kinda easy (i.e. you just find a similar case) ?
As timmii said, the questions are never straightforward. But even if they were, you wouldn't have nearly enough time to research cases during the exam itself. The vast majority of judgments are pages long, and the core legal principles are not always obvious.
For my contracts exam last semester, I had prepared a list of cases, with each listing accompanied by only one or two lines describing the legal principles enunciated by the case. As concise as that list was (I think the final version was down to three pages), I still wasted valuable time searching for a particular case when I hadn't cross-referenced properly.
General assessment tasks are usually not too difficult, but the exams are INTENSE. You truly have to
know the law to do well in them.
Hmm... I had another important point to make, but I've lost it.
Grats on the HD timmii.
I missed out by half a mark heh.