The study habits that got you to law school will get you kicked out of law school.
I’m not kidding.
Undergrad is mostly memorization. Law school is about applying dense rules to messy situations that have no right answer. It’s a different game. You’re not learning what the law is. You’re learning how to argue with it.
Your Calendar Is Your Boss
Before classes start, map out the entire semester. Get every final, paper deadline, and midterm on a calendar. All of it. Now you can see the whole field. Work backward from those dates and block out your study weeks.
"Study" is not a calendar entry. That’s a wish. A real entry is "Brief Pennoyer v. Neff for Civ Pro." Or "Outline Torts Chapter 3." Concrete tasks get done. Vague goals just create guilt. But when your study time is locked in, your downtime is real. You can actually have a Friday night off without the dread, because you know when the work is scheduled.
You Don't Know How to Read Anymore
Reading for poli-sci or history won't work here. Reading a judicial opinion is like taking apart an engine to see how it runs. You’re not reading for the plot; you’re looking for the logic.
That's what a case brief is for. It's a one-page summary of a case's essential parts, in your own words. Writing it is how you prove you actually get it.
My contracts professor told us he once spent four hours on a single 15-page case. He walked into class feeling like a genius and realized minutes later he’d completely missed the point. He said he remembered the exact moment of dread: 4:17 PM, sitting in his 2011 Honda Civic, listening to the radio, convinced he was going to flunk out. He didn’t. He just changed how he read.
A brief should have:
- Facts: What happened, in a sentence or two. Only what matters.
- Issue: The specific legal question the court had to answer.
- Rule: The legal principle the court used to decide.
- Analysis: How the court connected the rule to the facts. This is everything.
- Conclusion: The outcome. Who won.