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67 of 74 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Secrets of Success are Secret No More, July 26, 2000
This review is from: Getting To Maybe: How to Excel on Law School Exams (Paperback)
Getting to Maybe is a Godsend. Even for those of you who've already finished first-year, it's well worth getting. I am the author of Planet Law School: What You Need to Know Before You Go--but Didn't Know to Ask. Unfortunately, Getting to Maybe was first published in 1999, a year after PLS, so I could not recommend it in PLS. Hence this posting, now. Even though the authors and I are competitors, and our books are published by different firms, I urge all law students to get Getting to Maybe. (For one thing, the authors' critique of the IRAC model is succinct and devastating.) If you take doing well in law school (and becoming a good attorney) seriously, this book is a necessity. It's so well-written that I had to force myself to put it down, and ended up reading it in just two sittings, of several hours each. The earlier review, about the teaching of Tantric Yoga, in exactly right. With Getting to Maybe, the secrets are secret no more.
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86 of 97 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Impressive rigor, July 18, 2002
This review is from: Getting To Maybe: How to Excel on Law School Exams (Paperback)
The aim of this book is to help current law students perform well on law school exams. Law school exams are famously ambiguous; hence the title of the book. The title of the book is a play on the title of a classic book about the art of negotiation, called _Getting to Yes_. Implicit in _Getting to Maybe_ is that, unlike a negotiation, performance on law school exams does not require an exact answer or resolution. The method by which these law professors explain this concept is especially interesting. In connection with their academic research, they propose to break down law school exams into small components, and thoroughly analyze those components. The result is a very substantial and comprehensive analysis of the structure of law school exams and the skills required to do well on these exams. You may be asking how the professors purport to explain _all_ law school exams, for surely there are professors for whose exams these methods will not work. These professors make the interesting point that in the United States, law education is fairly uniform, and, therefore, the skills required to perform well on law school exams are fairly uniform, as well. I read this book prior to starting law school. I found it useful primarily because I have read a number of other books about legal reasoning and the study of law and the law school experience that are more basic than the material in this book. If this is your first book regarding the study of law or peformance in law school, I would advise putting it aside in favor of a book offering a broader overview of law, its study, and law school.
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85 of 98 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Worth your time, December 21, 2003
This review is from: Getting To Maybe: How to Excel on Law School Exams (Paperback)
I am a student at a top 5 law school. This book does not outline a specific system for taking exams, so if that is what you are looking for, look else where. What this book does provide is a good overview of the different types of gray areas that appear time and time again on exams. This will help you "spot the issues" and give you a feel for the kind of stuff your profs want to see written about come exam time. There are also plenty of general exam taking tips that area helpful. I have read many exam taking books, and this is the best of them. Read it early in the semester. It will help you focus on the important stuff in class and in the reading.
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