Improved Exam Taking

This memo is designed to help law students improve their performance on law school exams. It assumes you have taken a number of exams already and would like to improve your performance in your next set of exams. It is not designed to give advice for any specific subject, but to give advice that is generally helpful.

The starting point in improving exam performance is to diagnose the deficiencies in past exam performance. Most law students have a common pattern in their exam performance so you are looking to find your pattern. This can be accomplished by reviewing past exams in whatever ways are made available by your professors. Typical methods include meeting with faculty members to review your exams and reading your exams and comparing them to model answers or grading sheets if they are available. It is critically important that you review your past performance in as many courses as possible because you are looking for a pattern rather than an explanation for poor performance on an individual exam.  

In grading exams, I typically see five common exam mistakes:

(1) Failure to spot issues
(2) Failure to explore the issues in sufficient depth
(3) Failure to allocate time properly
(4) Failure to correctly describe legal rules
(5) Failure to answer the question you are asked

In conducting your effort at self-diagnosis it may be helpful to consider whether your common pattern involves one or more of these deficiencies.   

After figuring out what you do wrong in taking exams, the next step is to try and fix the problem. Each deficiency requires a different remedy. The next part of this memo will suggest ways to improve your exam performance in each of the five areas of weakness.

Failure to Spot Issues

If your self-diagnosis shows that you do well when you spot an issue, but you often fail to spot all the major issues, there are several things you can do to try and improve your issue spotting ability:

(1) First, examine as many past exams in a subject you are studying as you can and look for common patterns in the raising of issues. In most law school courses, there are four or five combinations of issues that can be raised in a question. While the facts for each question are new, those facts are being used to raise the same combination of issues. Faculty members often say “I always ask the same questions, just the facts are different.” Your examination of past questions is designed to learn what kind of facts are necessary to raise what kind of issues and what kinds of issues tend to be raised in combination in a single question. If there are model answers or answer sheets available, they will help with this process.  

(2) A second method of developing skill in spotting issues is to work in a study group to go over old exams. Having others explain to you what issues they see and why may help you to look for patterns that you now are ignoring.

(3) Read the whole exam before you answer the first question. Most professors won’t include two questions on the same exam that principally raise the same issues.  You may be able to focus on the right issues for each question by looking at the exam in its entirety.

(4) If it is a closed-book exam, memorize a list of all the major subjects covered in the course, and for every question review your mental check list to think about whether you’ve overlooked any issues. You may want to write this list on scrap paper when you start the exam, rather than relying on your memory. If it is an open-book exam, you can bring such a list with you to review each time you read a question.

Failure to explore the issues in sufficient depth

The failure to explore the issues in sufficient depth can occur in a number of different ways and the suggestions below are designed to deal with the various causes of this problem.

(1) One form of failing to explore the issues in sufficient depth is to describe applicable legal rules, but fail to apply the facts of the question to those rules. You should never just state rules of law abstractly; you always need to show how the facts of a question apply to that rule of law. Providing legal rules without showing how the facts apply to those rules will not demonstrate to the faculty member grading the exam that you understand the legal principle at issue. One way to practice this technique is to use old exams you took where you failed to apply the facts. Write out additions to each of the issues where you did not apply the facts.  In these additions you should supply the missing factual analysis to reinforce this crucial aspect of taking an exam.  

(2) A second form of failing to explore the issues in sufficient depth is caused by quickly assuming a particular answer to an issue you have spotted. On an exam, you should almost never (unless the question is framed to require it) assume there is only one answer. Instead, argue both ways on everything you can.  The exam is an opportunity for you to show you know how to make legal arguments and this typically includes making alternative arguments. By assuming an answer early on in your analysis, you are not performing a central task that the exam is providing you with an opportunity to demonstrate. If there is one way to look at a problem, the opposing side will be able to come up with an alternative way, even if it is not as strong an argument. You need to look for alternative characterizations of everything you can on an exam. If its got feathers and a beak, and says “Polly want a cracker,” don’t just assume it’s a parrot.  Maybe it’s a puppet, or a child in a Halloween costume. As with other forms of failing to explore issues in sufficient depth, working with your own prior exams can help with this task. First, mark each place where you made only one side of an argument. Next, try to make the opposing argument that you failed to make on the exam. This will make you more conscious of your tendency to quickly assume a particular outcome and give you practice in arguing both ways.

(3) One additional source of failing to discuss issues in sufficient depth is the reverse of failing to apply the facts to the law. It occurs when you discuss the facts in the abstract without tying the discussion to relevant legal principles. If you discuss the facts in the abstract you are treating them as though you are discussing the plot of a soap opera and considering whether the characters are behaving appropriately based on moral and not legal principles. You must link your discussion of the facts to a legal principle to which particular facts are relevant.

(4) There is often a relationship between the failure to state the relevant law accurately and completely and the failure to discuss the issue in sufficient depth. In my Religion and the Constitution course, suppose the exam question raises an issue of whether a law violates the Free Exercise Clause. If you answer the question by only considering the application of the strict scrutiny test to determine if the law violates the Free Exercise Clause, you already have a problem. What you’ve said is true, but it is incomplete since the strict scrutiny test only applies to some Free Exercise challenges. You must also consider if the law is the kind of neutral law of general applicability that should be analyzed under the Smith reasonablement standard. If you only apply the strict scrutiny test, you’ll lose points on your description of the applicable legal standard and, even more importantly, you'll lose points on the application of the law to the facts because you will not have discussed whether the law satisfies the Smith reasonableness test.

Failure to allocate time properly

Poor time allocation can occur in two different ways: (1) poor allocation among the questions so that you use too much time on one question and you don’t have enough time for the remaining questions or (2) poor time allocation within a question so that you use too much of the time allotted for a question on one or two issues and you don’t have time for other issues.

(1) Stick strictly to the recommended times. If the exam lists the percentage of the grade allocated to a question and not the time you should spend on the question, you should calculate the time allotted. If the question is worth 1/3 of the exam grade and it is a three hour exam, allot yourself one hour to answer the question. Professors grade by question and not an overall sense of how you did (unlike some exams in college). The last point earned is worth the same amount as the first point earned. Given this grading pattern, you must provide answers to all of the questions. Excellent performance on one question is not worth the price of earning too few points on other questions.

(2) Some questions are time eaters and others are not. To identify whether one of the questions falls into the time eater category, read the entire exam at the outset. If you think one of the questions will take whatever amount of time you have, do it last, even it is the first question. You're allowed to answer the questions out of order. Moreover, if you’re using a computer to take the exam, the professor will never even know you took this approach.

(3) Once again use your old exams to help improve your skills at time allocation. This is particularly helpful if you have an opportunity to look at a grading sheet or model answer for the exam, as some faculty members provide. Use the answer sheet or model answer to figure out how to edit down your answer to get the same number of points with many fewer words -- training yourself to answer efficiently.

(4) Don’t waste time summarizing the facts before you start answering an exam question. Only discuss the facts when applying them to applicable legal principles.

(5) Make an outline of the issues you plan to discuss in answering a question and check off the issues as you complete them. This will help to avoid discussing the same issue twice because you didn’t keep track of what you had already discussed.

(6) Try and start your answer to an exam question by writing about what you believe are major issues in the question. There is a tendency to write the most about the issues you discuss first. This is because you are not as worried about time early on in answering an exam question. To get the most out of this more extended discussion, it should be a discussion of a complex issue with many subissues or it should be an issue with many relevant facts. The more aspects of the issue there are, the more points on the exam are likely to be awarded for a thorough discussion of the issue. Therefore, try and start your answer where you have the most to gain rather than with an easy issue that does not merit extended discussion.
 
Failure to correctly describe legal rules

The failure to accurately and completely describe the relevant legal principles is a very serious problem that will have a cascading impact on your exam performance. You will lose points allocated to a description of the legal rules and you will also lose points for applying those principles to the relevant facts.  

(1) One way to deal with this problem is to work in a study group. When you prepare outlines as part of a study group, you will have the opportunity to share those outlines with others in the group and make sure that any discrepancies between your understanding of the applicable legal principles (black letter rules) and the understanding of others in the group are discussed to figure out who is right and who is wrong.

(2) Prepare an outline based on your understanding of the subject from assigned reading and class discussions and compare it to hornbooks or treatises in the subject or even some of the commercially prepared outlines to try and identify mistakes you are making in your understanding of the law.

Failure to answer the question you are asked

(1) Read the questions carefully and pay particular attention to what you are asked to do to answer the question. Some exam questions may give general instructions such as “Discuss or What result and why?” However, other questions may be quite specific in assigning you a specific task. The question may place you in a particular role or tell you what issues it wants you to discuss. Make sure to do exactly what the question asks you to do. Those last few instructions in the question about how to answer it are as important as the facts that precede the instructions. Ignore them at your peril.

(2) Read each question carefully so you don’t distort the facts when you answer it. Don’t make up new facts to fill in some blank in the facts provided. If there is a missing fact that would be helpful to you, mention this gap in the facts as part of your analysis and say that resolving it might help in the analysis, but do not continue on and answer the question assuming the existence of particular additional facts. You will only be awarded credit for analyzing the facts you are given and not for analyzing facts you make up.

As a general summary of the advice I have provided throughout this memo, here is a top 5 list of what you need to do to succeed on law school exams:

1. Apply the law to the relevant facts and don’t abstractly discuss the law without the facts or the facts without the law.

2. Argue in the alternative and don’t assume there is only one legal conclusion that can be reached.

3. Answer exactly the question you are asked..

4. Stick to the time allocated for each question.

5. State the law accurately.