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Starting Off Right in Law School

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Law school is different from other graduate schools. Students will be confronted by an entirely new vocabulary and unique and demanding educational methods. This book is designed to give these students a head start, both by introducing them to the fundamentals of the legal process and by helping them acquire the study skills necessary for success. The first chapters introduce students to the stages of a lawsuit from the lawyer's initial contact with a client through the filing an appeal. The next chapters include cases that illustrate the different roles the trial court, jury, appellate court, and court of last resort play in a lawsuit, knowledge helpful in doctrinal courses, but crucial in legal writing assignments. The final chapters suggest how students can effectively read and analyze cases, outline, and apply what they have learned on exams and in legal writing assignments. The third edition includes an expanded chapter on note-taking and outlining and how legal writing and doctrinal course demand different approaches to each. More study questions are included with answers to be found in the appendix. This book is the perfect tool for pre-law students to read on their own or for law school orientation required reading.

188 pages, Paperback

First published July 1, 1997

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Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews
Profile Image for alex.
107 reviews2 followers
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August 18, 2025
if u ever choke on a bone in your boneless fish fillet call me
Profile Image for Olivia.
16 reviews2 followers
August 12, 2017
giving this 4 stars solely for its shoutout to braum's ice cream
Profile Image for Evan.
201 reviews32 followers
August 15, 2009
A nice balance to Planet Law School II, which has been my primary resource in prepping for the way of the barrister. PLS operates from a standpoint of absolute cynicism and considerable paranoia, starting from the premise that law school is designed to frustrate and befuddle to such an extent that students should use primers and a few other aids to teach themselves the entire curriculum before the first day of classes. Seeing as I've never heard anyone dispute that a) first year grades are crucial to future opportunities, and b) students fail to get good first year grades because they waste precious months trying to figure out the game, I have been content to take the PLS "pre-law curriculum" as a worthy goal. The only shortcoming, however, is that full adherence to this method requires treating law prep as a full-time job for a full year prior to the start of classes. The author does offer abridged intineraries, but makes it quite clear that optimal results will only be achieved by those who put in maximum effort.

Here's where Nygren's book makes a valuable contribution. She's all about triage. She avoids the scylla of narrow student rants (see Law School Confidential) as well as the vast body of what the PLS author scornfully terms "law school lite" guides. She acknowledges the need for strategic management of one's studies for optimal results, but unlike PLS, helpfully addresses the realities of the number of hours in the day. She offers streamlined, but not dumbed down, approaches to reading and briefing cases and outlining courses. After skimming a variety of approaches to law school exams that seemed overly gimmicky to me (everybody's got their own acronym or number of steps), I found Nygren's suggestions nicely balanced between efficiency and sophistication.

These best aspects of the book are contained in the last third or so. The first two thirds introduces numerous basic terms and concepts, and uses the UCC rules for implied warranty of merchantability in relation to food product liability cases to demonstrate the basics of lawyerly analysis. This is fairly well done for what it is, but falls far short of the kind of in-depth treatment of such topics available in primers or other short treatise aids.

In summary, the book is a good "reality check" to anyone overwhelmed by the likes of PLS. There are some ideas here I will try to keep in mind through my first semester. By the same token, if you have more than a weekend to do prep reading for law school, you'd be unforgivably lazy not to go beyond this slim text.
Profile Image for Rachel.
60 reviews
September 30, 2008
This book was a required read for my law school, but I thought it was really good. It is really short (and therefore practical) and explains some of the basic, foundational terms and procedures that would really help beginning law students. I knew a lot of it from previous law school experience, but it was a good refresher and I especially like how she explained how to read a casebook, brief a case, create an outline, and write essay exams. Definitely worth picking up if you are starting law school soon.
58 reviews
June 3, 2010
This seemed like good preparation to me (although I can't say for sure yet since I haven't started law school). It's nice that it focuses on one law, so the few cases included seem to cover all the possible issues. It also gives specific notes and test answers that students should arrive at, so you get a feel for the real thing. My only complaint is that it's short.
Profile Image for Miles.
28 reviews
June 6, 2008
Good little primer on what to expect in Law school for the student thinking about going.
Profile Image for Alisa.
267 reviews24 followers
April 4, 2010
Succinct and interesting, for a book of this title. Enjoyed learning about the implied warranty of merchantability.
Profile Image for Hunter Starr.
26 reviews3 followers
June 19, 2010
Can't really tell because I have not started school but it was well written and enlightening.
15 reviews
February 11, 2015
An excellent introduction to law in the USA for the prospective law student.
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews

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