
Ask The Professor: Top 3 Things To Know If You Failed The Bar Exam
The only thing that will change your feelings will be to begin working on a plan of attack for the next time you take the exam.
The only thing that will change your feelings will be to begin working on a plan of attack for the next time you take the exam.
It is not about how much law you know, it is about knowing how to score points with the law you do know.
Join the webinar on September 25th and learn some quick wins you can implement right away.
Here are the three things you must do now to ensure you pass the bar exam.
A free eBook containing the most popular and useful posts designed to help those who will pick themselves up and try again on the bar exam.
As you begin your preparation for this July’s bar exam, here is a sample of some of the most commonly thrown-around tips and whether they have any merit.
You knew enough law to pass, but did not know how to get points with the law you knew. How can you change that when you retake the exam?
Getting paid can be an arduous task. You should make it as easy on yourself and your clients as possible.
New York has adopted the Uniform Bar Exam (UBE) and it will be administered for the first time starting in July 2016. Will the test this July will look entirely different than the one you took last time?
The bar exam is a test of analytical skills, not an exam of who can regurgitate the most law. How can you pass next time?
Unlike many other tests where performance gets better when you take the test over, this is not true of the bar exam.
The UBE is coming to New York... so if you're re-taking the exam in February you'd better pass it.
Proper trust accounting and three-way reconciliation are essential for protecting client funds and avoiding serious compliance risks. In this guide, we break down these critical processes and show how legal-specific software can help your firm stay accurate, efficient, and audit-ready.
Unlike many other tests where performance gets better when you take the test over, it is not true of the bar exam.
The reason why people fail the bar is they did not get enough points. Improve your methods and your strategy and your score will improve.
You’ll get words of encouragement from friends and family, but that will only make things worse. What you need is a plan…
If law schools are admitting less qualified students to fill seats and then blaming them for failing the bar, who let whom down?
Here are some of the most commonly thrown-around bar tips and whether they have any merit.