Yeah. This a thousand times.if you are thinking about studying law get ready to get fat and become an anxious mess...
Downloading journal articles is idiotic. You end up failing the subject if you just rely on journal articles. I got HD in a law subject the way I did it was:best way of studying...
**COUGH!** download journal articles **COUGH!** Ctrl F **COUGH**
rock up to lectures, take notes... you will be smarter than the knobs who have the time to read everything...
What about your other subjects?I got HD in a law subject the way I did it was:
Edit: Hold on... you do Comm., not Law. I have an excellent comic for that. Basically, Business Law and Ethics isn't law. On behalf of everyone who's studying law and who has studied law, please stop thinking that you do law, thanks.-Aim to do all the textbook, tutorial, online and past paper questions
-go to all the lectures and tutorials
-make notes
-Aim to read the textbook and cases
-do the law assignment
- share notes/ network with other students
-work eight weeks ahead of the class (Are you serious?)
-have plenty of time for revision (Um, consistently revise throughout the semester.)
- I did one subject each semester, for my weekly schedule I would do 3 days of reading the textbook/ making notes and 4 days of doing questions. (What the hell?)
-aim to get 100 per cent (I got 85 per cent in Business Law and Ethics) (You must joking, or is this thing specific to your uni?)
Having done BOTH real Law degree units and the compulsory Law unit for a business degree, this is definitely true. The Law subject you do in Commerce is just a watered down and summarised version of Law for people who only need a basic knowledge of the subject (i.e. Business students). Real Law subjects are way tougher and far more analytical - I mean, they are just in another league. Also, I should add that even though I dont go to UTS, I'm pretty sure that most "Business Law" units are similar everywhere because the industry bodies which accredit certain Business majors (e.g. Accounting and finance) mandate that these students undertake such a unit.Edit: Hold on... you do Comm., not Law. I have an excellent comic for that. Basically, Business Law and Ethics isn't law. On behalf of everyone who's studying law and who has studied law, please stop thinking that you do law, thanks.
put in my input on that list... people are different... not saying this should be followed... call it my method of madness...Downloading journal articles is idiotic. You end up failing the subject if you just rely on journal articles. I got HD in a law subject the way I did it was: was not referring to just journal articles, I was referring to anything electronic... cases, ebooks, austlii, your school library website, etc... ctrl f ftw... beats reading god know how many pages of jibberish before you get to something that's relevant... its a quick way to find out whether a certain article, ebook, case, etc is relevant
- do all the textbook, tutorial, online and past paper questions ... next to impossible for a full time student, be selective on your reading that's my advice... half the shit you read is not even relevant...
- go to all the lectures and tutorials - Important, do it... you learn a hell of a lot... but make sure you are really switched on and don't use class time as a social event
- make notes - Important for subject with exams!!!
- read the textbook - Not Important at all, just read it for your assignments and have them available for exams or whenever you need them (Don't buy them just borrow them from the library)... they are expensive as well, for instance, I would not pay about $250 for EU Law textbooks... I'm not bailing out the Greek Government to pay that much for text books... in relation to text books during exams... I never use them in my exams, you don't have time...
- do the law assignment - obviously, otherwise your prospects of passing are slim at best
- share notes/ network with other students - Probably, the MOST! important thing that would be beneficial to you... it also makes the course a bit less mundane...
- work eight weeks ahead of the class - Personal preference but I need the pressure behind me, otherwise I can never get anything done... I like to sit on things for a bit... But, people are different...
- have plenty of time for revision - you have 12 or more weeks to prepare for an exam... don't stress too much... that's not to say you should not revise... but revising is not sitting in front of books for your whole SWATVAC... if you have: taken proper notes as you should during your lectures and tutorials, and done your own notes that are easy to reference and follow during an exam, you should be fine...
- I did one subject each semester, for my weekly schedule I would do 3 days of reading the textbook/ making notes and 4 days of doing questions.
-aim to get 100 per cent (I got 85 per cent in Business Law and Ethics): Quickest way to prime yourself for disappointment, be realistic!!!
Indeed. By analogy, those taught watered-down basic sciences by disciplines of medical schools are rightfully to consider themselves being in the same league as medical students.I studied Business Law and Ethics (BLE) at UTS and it is taught by the faculty of law. It used to be the first law subject (foundations in law subject in 2009 at UTS) for those doing Bachelor of Laws. Now BLE has been replaced by a subject called Perspectives on Law at UTS (the foundation Law subject in 2013 at UTS).
Well, rest assured we don't necessarily think any less of you now that you've mentioned this and that you have credited luck.The other students who did Business Law and Ethics, a little less than 40 per cent failed. So I was lucky to get High Distinction but I did the hard yards that is why I prevailed.
I think this might have been a better way of articulating the nuances between business law for business and business law.Having done BOTH real Law degree units and the compulsory Law unit for a business degree, this is definitely true. The Law subject you do in Commerce is just a watered down and summarised version of Law for people who only need a basic knowledge of the subject (i.e. Business students). Real Law subjects are way tougher and far more analytical - I mean, they are just in another league. Also, I should add that even though I dont go to UTS, I'm pretty sure that most "Business Law" units are similar everywhere because the industry bodies which accredit certain Business majors (e.g. Accounting and finance) mandate that these students undertake such a unit.
There is nothing new under the sun.don't limit yourself to the prescribed text as well... step out of the boundaries, find your own shit, formulate your own opinion (don't just recite someone else's, but make sure what you say is educated)... that's where the real marks are
I found the study guides to be pretty helpful (I had the Oxford ones) - if you need a bit of help understanding a complex concept or whatever, they can help a lot. Obviously though, they cant be your sole means of research/study, they are just a quick reference thing. They have their place and I definitely think they are good for their intended purpose.Moreover, I wouldn't say study guides are the answer, but have a look at the uni library and they will have heaps of resources recommended by the tutors, I found that pretty useful as I ended up using some points out of them, bumping myself to a better mark than expected.