Being a student in law school is very different than being a student in undergrad. For many, your 1L year will consist of more work than all 4 years of undergrad combined. For others, it may not seem much harder. Of course, either way, it is going to be a very different learning process than a majority of entering law students will have ever experienced before. Some key differences are listed below:
- Reading Cases. The biggest reason the 1L year is the hardest year is because as a student you are experiencing a whole new language in the law. Law school is taught by reading case opinions. Some of these cases are from hundreds of years ago, some utilize Latin, some over-use legalese. Many are just long, boring, and hard to follow. The point is that you are going to spend a lot of time reading your 1L year because it is difficult to adjust to reading opinions. Something that should be comforting is that you are in the same boat with 99% of your classmates, who have also not spent much time reading case opinions for fun.
- The Socratic Method. Most professors in law school utilize the Socratic Method. This means that they “cold call” on students. Some professors are nice and like to give people a heads up of when they are on call, but more professors are not. This requires a higher level of preparation for class. When you read you need to read for comprehension so that you will be prepared to answer questions about a given case. Some students will write out a case brief for every case they read (meaning they list the plaintiff, defendant, procedural history, courts holding and reasoning, dissent, etc.) while others rely on highlighting in their book. You will quickly figure out what works best for you but it is a good idea to familiarize yourself with different techniques to try the first couple of weeks.
- Taking notes in class. Because of the nature of law school the way that many students take notes in undergrad is not conducive to law school. You will not have time to record every word the professor says. Instead you need to figure out how to take notes in class that will jot your memory for what you learned in class later on when preparing your outline for the final. While most finals are open note and book, having a 100 page outline of everything you ever discussed in class will NOT help you on the final so take notes accordingly.
Of course this is not an exhaustive list of all the differences between law school and undergrad and every law school is different. There are many “guides” to surviving the first year of law school out there. While it is not a bad idea to prepare yourself for law school during the summer before you also need to make sure you have time to enjoy yourself! You will deal with enough stress during your 1L year don’t start the summer before! Please feel free to direct any questions about what we did to prepare for our 1L years to prelaw@usc.edu!