Tag Archives: Law School

Gilbert Law Summaries List

23 Apr

Hello! This is for the Law Students/Lawyers who read my stuff 🙂

I have recently discovered that I couldn’t find a good list of Gilbert Law Summaries that are available.  Although most of them are available on Amazon, there are so many new, used, and duplicate names that it is hard to find out what is actually there. However, there isn’t a publisher website to locate or a list I could find elsewhere. So I put my own together!

I have listed them alphabetically here as closely as possible.  There actually aren’t as many as I thought; however, some differ from Emanuel and cover up those holes.  Hope this helps someone else!

FIND THE LIST HERE

 

 

Florida Bar Results are Out

14 Apr

Florida Results can be found here.

Random note for those who took the Feb. 2014 Florida Bar. If you checked your results immediately after they came out, you might want to check again. They posted July 2013 results at first. It took about 30 min. before they realized the mistake and re-posted.

2015 Law School Rankings

11 Mar

The Rankings are out! 

US News & World Report has released it’s official list of the US Law Schools ranked in order.  . . Iowa made it out at #27 — a few spots lower than when I entered.  In-State Tuition is $28,047; while Out-Of-State tuition is $49,025.  There are currently 411 students at the school–I was one of those 411!  😛 I made it into a statistic.

All I care about though is that we made it out on top of Fordham.  I studied over the summer with those students, and got a ton of sh** about how “UIowa” was just less than and that I would never be able to work outside of the Mid-West.  Honest to God, one girl looked at me snidely in front of our internship boss (Samsung Head of Department) at a fish dinner and comments, “Well, you’re from like Iowa. . . . I mean, you probably don’t know what a lobster is.  You all eat like raccoon, right?  Lobster is this kind of fish from the sea.”  I kid you not. . . . I just about smacked her.   Anyway, YAY! we beat them in the rankings!

 

 

Bar Exam Tips

26 Feb

I haven’t gotten my score back, so I can’t offer any advice as to how to pass the bar. But I can tell you what let me survive the bar. 🙂

  1. READ THE INSTRUCTIONS FIRST! Line up everything you’ll need for the exam days, as well as orientation. Verify what proof of identity is required and whether anything else is needed for registration. You cannot arrive without the stuff needed to sign in.
  2. Look at what you can and cannot bring into the exam. It does you no good to orient yourself to a highlighting system in practice if highlighters are against the rules.  
  3. Practice Test with the tools given in the bar.  If you have pencils, then use pencils.  
  4. Give yourself an extra 15-30 minutes to arrive the first day of orientation. There will be plenty of people around to chat with, and it allows you the potential time for recovering if you get lost.  Make sure you know the route you’ll take to get there on time each day.
  5. Check out where food is located. In Iowa, the only nearby food is the Starbucks food cart, but it can run out of food after a while (or at least any options).  Everything else is a fair distance away.  
  6. Find out where to access drinks. Especially drinks at lower prices than the Starbucks. They wanted $3.50 for the same bottle that was $1.00 in the machine.
  7. Don’t eat stuffy foods. You’re going to be sitting for the next 6 hours in one spot with limited movement. Don’t eat anything that will stuff you up and make you sick.
  8. Don’t drink too much. You’re going to get 1-2 trips to the bathroom max. . . don’t drink too much water. 
  9. Don’t drink alcohol. Wait until after the exam–you cannot afford a hangover or to feel groggy the next day.
  10. SLEEPI know that everyone is already aware of this, but you need a decent night’s sleep.  The stress starts letting up the closer you get to finishing the bar, and by the end you’ll start feeling tired. It’s even worse when the rooms are warm and the multiple choice questions hit the boring stage.  Try to be as well rested as possible.
  11. Stop Stressing. It’s done; you have no more time to study or re-call anything else. Whatever happens is going to happen regardless of what you’re going to do.  Not worth extra stress that will only make you more tired.
  12. If possible, bring someone with you. They don’t want you to bring in anything, so having someone on hand to make sure you arrive safely, have money for food, watch over your bags, etc. can be a big help. The moral support isn’t too bad either.
  13. Time Everything. The biggest complaint I heard was that people ran out of time–many failed to answer some of the questions at all.  The test is set up to be easy to divide into portions. Essays get 30 minutes each; Multiple choice gets 3-4 minutes each; MPT essays get 90 minutes each. Promise yourself that you won’t spend any more time. If you have a chance at the end, go back, but otherwise try to put something down for everything. 

Bar Takers, Spread the World

23 Feb

Hey legal bar-takers, I need your help! I’m compiling a page that lists all the dates that bar results will be released feb. and july. Since the bar administrators don’t want us calling them, I want to get the information out independently.

But I need you all to tell me the dates for your exam results, let me know when they come out. I’ve emailed/phoned the states, but some of them haven’t responded/won’t give me specifics since I’m not taking their exam. If you have a date, comment on this post. I’ll update my findings!

Law Diploma’s in Folks!

8 Feb

DSC00186I’m so excited!  Dedicating this Law School Diploma to my mom; she got me through it all thick and thin.  Studying Sparknotes, highlighting Emanuel’s, combing through flash cards, and encouraging caffeine drinks.  When I was panicking the night before exams, she was there with cram food and cheerful words. When I got the chance to study abroad, she sent me off with hugs, kisses, and buttloads of prayers. When I needed support, she showed up with her fighting shirt on.  Without her, this wouldn’t have been possible. I love you mom!

 

No More Law School!!!

11 Dec

Celebrate my friends! I have just turned in my last paper for Law School. No more finals, no more law classes, no more laws school!

Yippee!!!!  I’m seriously so excited I might faint.

Law School Is a Good Looks Murderer

9 Dec

You know when your eyes are bloodshot, your draining the Visine bottle like nobody’s business, your hair is greasy from a whole night of stress, your heart is racing, and your skin is all dry and itchy that you’ve been spending way too much time on research papers and living off caffeine. If I don’t get some water and sleep (not necessarily in that order); I’m going to crash.  

 

Understanding the Iowa Law School’s Tuition Change

5 Dec

Law School

It appears that the University of Iowa Board of Regents has just bypassed the Law School’s tuition recommendation. One step forward for the rights of law students anywhere!

They Thought We Were Stupid (We Weren’t)

Way back in October, the University of Iowa College of Law came forward with a tuition proposition that had the students in an uproar. They may not have been in the streets striking, but social media accounts lit up.  None of us understood how the Law School thought we would be okay with the proposal – did we look that stupid?  

 

After attending UIowa Law, I will owe nearly $200,000 in tuition. I owed less than $27,000 after undergrad.

 

According to reports, the Law School wanted to cut non-resident tuition by almost $8000 (with the cost dropping from $47,252 to $39,500 per year).  In order to prop up this cut in non-resident tuition, the College was going to raise resident tuition by approx. $500 (up to about $26,750 per year).  It sounded really good, especially when you consider the fact that resident applications have dropped drastically in recent years (actually all applications have dropped; law schools are just slow at admitting it). Since  2010, applications from Iowa Residents have fallen by nearly 50% (from 287 to 173).  So with more non-residents coming in, it sounds like a good idea to drop tuition for them right?  

The Students however saw the following problems –

  • First, the ratio of residents to non-residents is closer than one might think. Iowa has fairly studiously removed the statistics for the student body; however, as of 2011, 49% of the students were residents. (1) For them, tuition went up.  
  • Second, the number of non-residents paying resident tuition is pretty high. They often have  (and are hired first for) Research Assistantships (R.A. positions),  working for professors in exchange for certain benefits. The main benefit is resident tuition. That’s right, by second year – and if not then, definitely third year – many non-resident students are working for resident tuition.

So now, the resident tuition hike is hitting both the resident students and the non-residents who have R.A. positions.

Suffice to say, students were unhappy.

The Board of Regents Responds

Thank God for the wonderful UIowa Board of Regents who acknowledged the problems with the plan.  As Regent Katie Mulholland said,“If it is fair to lower nonresident tuition, then our resident students ought to have the same opportunity in terms of cost.”  (2)  The Board went on to state that they were “‘disappointed’ a tuition cut wasn’t proposed by the law school.” (2). Instead, the Board has proposed that, while the non-resident tuition drop will stand, there will also be a $4,464 drop in resident tuition (to $22,284 per year).  If the Board approves of the proposal, it will begin taking effect in 2014. Too late to help me, but hopefully it will be beneficial to those student in the future.  At least it’s a step in the right direction.

Additional Resources

New Jersey July 2013 Bar Exam Results

7 Nov

New Jersey’s Bar results for July 2013 can be found here.