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REMINDER: BAR PRESENTATION TODAY

Fri, 10/23/2009 - 13:47
Monday, October 26, Noon - Learn what you can do now to prepare for the Bar Exam.  Presented by T. Leigh Hearn, South Regional Director of Kaplan PMBR.  This presentation is open to all Brandeis law students and will cover the various components of the bar exam in multiple states, planning, a day in the life of the bar examinee, and strategies for the essay and multiple choice components of the bar exam.  If you have class beginning at 12:35 or 12:45, you are invited to stay until you need to leave for class.  The presentation will be in Room 275 from noon to 12:55.  Bring your lunch!

Interested in the Clinic? Application deadline is Oct. 28.

Thu, 10/22/2009 - 10:29

Everyone interested in participating in the Clinic next semester should send a resume, transcript, and short statement to Professor Shelley Santry by October 28 at shelley.santry@louisville.edu.  Any questions should be directed to her as well.  Decisions will be made by November 1 and all applicants will be contacted prior to registration for classes.

Students must have completed 60 hours by the end of this semester to qualify for a limited license to practice law under Supreme Court Rule 2.540.

Congratulations to the 2009-10 National Trial Team Members

Thu, 10/22/2009 - 07:50
Congratulations to Aaron Price, Algeria Ford, Andrew Henson, Brian Bennett, and Erin Bravo for making the 2009-10 National Trial Team.  The team will compete in February in Columbus, Ohio.  Rob Riley and Kim Ballard are the team's coaches.

Academic Success Tip - Find Time for Exam Preparation

Wed, 10/21/2009 - 16:47
Tip #4:  Allow time for three types of outline review.   Making the world’s greatest outline is counter-productive if there is no time to learn and review it.  One type of review is intense studying to learn the material in your outline initially (several topics or sub-topics each study period).  The second type of review is regular reading through the outline from cover to cover to reinforce material that you have already learned and anticipate material that you will learn (at least once a week).  The third type of review is additional careful studying of areas that still confuse you or are hard to remember (as often as needed to “conquer” the topic).

The Bar Exam - What You Need to Know!

Wed, 10/21/2009 - 09:44
This Monday, October 26 - Learn what you can do now to prepare for the Bar Exam.  This presentation is open to all Brandeis law students and will cover the various components of the bar exam in multiple states, planning, a day in the life of the bar examinee, and strategies for the essay and multiple choice components of the bar exam.  If you have class beginning at 12:35 or 12:45, you are invited to stay until you need to leave for class.  The presentation will be in Room 275 from noon to 12:50.  Chick-fil-A will be served.

Academic Success Tip - Find Time for Exam Preparation

Wed, 10/21/2009 - 09:42
Tip #3:  Become aware of when you lose focus.  Determine why you are losing concentration.  Then, determine whether you can correct the situation.  Do you need to make your reading more active by asking questions as you read?  Do you need to move to a quieter place?  Do you need to write a reminder note so that you stop worrying about forgetting something?  Are you hungry and need a quick snack?    If you cannot re-capture your focus, then take a short break and come back once you are refreshed.

Poker Tournament!!

Wed, 10/21/2009 - 09:18
The Student Animal Legal Defense Fund will host a Texas Hold Em' Tournament on Sunday, Oct. 25th at the Monkey Wrench, 1025 Barrett Avenue. The game is no limit Texas Hold Em', $20 buy in, 3000 starting chips, 15 minute blind levels, caps at 60 players plus alternates. First place wins a Nintendo Wii! Sign ups are on the silver bulletin board in the law school lobby. Anyone and everyone is invited to enter. 

Louisville Law Dining Guide

Tue, 10/20/2009 - 12:44

The Louisville Law Dining Guide contains reviews of the law school community's favorite dining establishments in the city and sourrounding area. It's by no means exhaustive, but it is informative, especially for those of you that are new to town.

The Student Bar Association's favorites include: Third Avenue Café, J. Alexanders, Ramsi's Café On the World, Spinelli's Pizzeria, El Mundo and the Irish Rover. Dean Chen, Michael Ben-Avraham, Scott Campbell and Professors Knowles and Hilyerd each recommend the Santa Fe Grill.

See the dining guide for more reviews, details and directions. 

 

 

SPRING 2010 REGISTRATION INFORMATION

Tue, 10/20/2009 - 10:45

Please see the attached document for registration days and times. 

Pre-registration forms for ALL students must be returned to Student Records by 4:00 p.m., Thursday, October 29, 2009.

Registration materials will be available in Student Records on Tuesday, October 20, 2009.

The Bar Exam - What You Need to Know!

Tue, 10/20/2009 - 09:53
This Monday, October 26 - Learn what you can do now to prepare for the Bar Exam.  This presentation is open to all Brandeis law students and will cover the various components of the bar exam in multiple states, planning, a day in the life of the bar examinee, and strategies for the essay and multiple choice components of the bar exam.  If you have class beginning at 12:35 or 12:45, you are invited to stay until you need to leave for class.  The presentation will be in Room 275 from noon to 12:50.  Chick-fil-A will be served.  

Academic Success Tip - Find Time for Exam Preparation

Tue, 10/20/2009 - 09:48
Tip #2:  Take advantage of “windfall” time.   Always keep tasks handy that can be used as study “fillers” when unexpected time becomes available.  Working with flashcards, rewriting a rule several times for memory, or reviewing a chunk of an outline can create productive time when a ride or study buddy is late.

Interested in Trying Out for the Tax Moot Court Team?

Mon, 10/19/2009 - 20:27
Any upper-level student interested in trying out for the Tax Moot Court Team MUST sign up on the door of the Moot Court Board Office by Friday October 23.  After we get an accurate count of those interested, we will provide information about what is expected for the tryouts and when those dates will be.  If you have any questions please contact Blake Nolan at blake.nolan@louisville.edu.

Chili Cook-off is a Success!

Mon, 10/19/2009 - 15:29

Congratulations to Jim Becker! His entry, "Melinda Becker's Deer Chili", won for the second consecutive year. Following by just a 1/2 vote, was Becky Wimberg's award-winning southwest chili, aka "Becky's Kickin' Chicken Chili".

Thanks so much to all who purchased a meal! A grand total of $317, which will be split among the five charities of the UofL Cares campaign, was raised.

Other tasty entries included:

  • Kathy Bean's "Cleveland Art Museum Tomato Basil Soup" and her husband's "Bombay Bob's Vegan Red Lentil Soup"
  • Tom Blackburn's "Turkey Chili"
  • Becky Wenning's "Homemade Beef Stew"
  • Vickie & Leslie Tencers' homemade "Cream of Mushroom Soup"
  • Kimberly Ballard's "Vegetarian Chili with Whole Wheat Pasta"

Many thanks to the following individuals who also contributed: Charlene Taylor, Janet Sullivan, Rita Siegwald, Debra Reh, Peggy Bratcher, Jina Scinta, Brandon Hamilton, Brenda Hill, Ariana Levinson, Grace Giesel, Barbara Thompson, Jodi Duce, Kathy Urbach, and Angela Beverly.

If you haven't already made a pledge, we hope you'll do so now.  To make a pledge on-line or to print out a form to contribute by mail, visit UofL Cares.  

 

Securities Law Moot Court Competition Tryouts

Mon, 10/19/2009 - 14:59
Securities Law Moot Court Competition tryouts will be held Wednesday October 28th from 12:15-2:15 p.m. and Thursday, October 29th from 4:15-5:30 p.m in the Allen Courtroom.  Interested 2Ls, 3Ls, and 4Ls are invited to sign up. Tryouts consist of a written and oral component.  Students should pick up a tryout problem from the envelope outside the Moot Court Board door as soon as practical and sign up for a tryout time.  Students must submit their written answer to the problem, resume, and an unofficial transcript (all in a sealed envelope) to the Moot Court Board office by October 27 at 5:00.    The competition will be held March 25-28 at Fordham University School of Law in New York City.  The team is coached by Professor Manning Warren.
  Email any questions to Ashley Eade at amgill06@louisville.edu.

Academic Success Tip - Find Time for Exam Preparation

Mon, 10/19/2009 - 09:29

Everybody is sliding into “studying for exams” mode.  Time becomes a critical variable now.  It is important to find time for all of your tasks.  It is also important to be productive with that time.  This week's tips will focus on how to get more time out of each day and be more productive during studying.

Tip #1:  Evaluate your day for “lost” time.   Look for time wasted in the following ways:  unproductive time between classes; assignment time stretched to 3 hours when with more diligence it could have been finished in 2 ½ hours; delay in starting a project because “I have all day;” inefficient and scattered errand running or other non-school tasks; completion of chores or other non-school tasks during prime study time.  If only ½ hour is captured each day of the week, it nets 3 ½ hours of extra study time.

Academic Success Tip - Beware of Bad Advice

Thu, 10/15/2009 - 17:26

Bad advice:  You can’t do any practice questions until right before the exam because you don’t know enough.

Why this advice is bad advice:

  • Exams are all about applying the concepts and law that you have learned all semester to new fact scenarios or legal problems.
  • You wouldn’t go on a black diamond ski slope without lots of practice.  Why would you go into an exam without having worked on several practice questions throughout the semester?
  • A multitude of practice questions are available that test your knowledge on sub-topics and topics and not just entire courses.

Alternatives:

  • Do some practice questions at the end of each sub-topic to test your application skills.  Can you spot the issues and sub-issues?  Can you apply the concepts correctly?  Can you apply the rules and exceptions to the rules?
  • Practice your approach to questions:  how will you analyze the question; how will you marshal the facts; how will you organize your answer; how will you write the answer in the most concise way.
  • Become more adept by starting with one-issue questions, then progressing to two- or three-issue questions, then progressing to more extensive questions.  Once you can organize and answer shorter questions, you can practice your organization for longer questions.
  • Use multiple sources of questions:  ones handed out by the professor; questions in study aids; questions you and your study partners write and swap; questions from prior exams.  
  • Schedule practice question time each week for each course so that you do not forget to practice or put off practice too long.

POSTPONED--Federal Court Program for Law Students

Thu, 10/15/2009 - 10:16

Due to lack of participation, the following program is postponed.  We will try to reschedule for February. 

Clerk Jeffrey Apperson of the Western District of Kentucky will conduct a program for law students this Saturday, October 17 at 9 a.m. at the federal courthouse downtown.  Mr. Apperson will conduct a courthouse tour and an electronic filing demonstration.  Electronic filing of court documents is now required in most federal courts, including Kentucky's, and attorneys must have the training before practicing before the courts.  The program will last approximately two hours.

Any interested student should e-mail Barry Dunn by 9 a.m. Friday.

Thanks to Professor Laura Rothstein, the Moot Court Board, and the University of Louisville Law Review for arranging the event.

Academic Success Tip - Beware of Bad Advice (Cont'd)

Thu, 10/15/2009 - 09:35

This week’s tips focus on bad advice that is often given out by well-intentioned students.  Critique these pieces of advice carefully and consider the alternatives.

Bad Advice:  You don’t have to study as hard for an open-book exam because you can look up anything that you want.

Why this advice is bad advice:

  • You will have very little time to look up anything during the exam.  Open-book exams are traps for the naïve.
  • If you are only generally familiar with the material, you will not have in-depth knowledge to spot all of the issues and to support your arguments.
  • “Open book” may have a very limited definition (Ex. code book but no outlines or notes).  "Open book" may have a very limited value-added component (Ex. you may not write in your rule book that is allowed in the exam).

Alternatives:

  • Treat an open-book exam with the same reverence as a closed-book exam.
  • Study the material so well that you “own it” rather than being generally familiar with it.  Then, you will not need to look up much.
  • If it is a code/rule course, you want to have a solid memory for at least a “condensed” version of a code section or rule because you will not have time to look up and read every code section or rule during the exam.
  • If a code/rule book is allowed, make sure you have extensive practice in using that source so you are efficient in its use if you must look something up.
  • Know exactly what the professor will allow you to bring to the exam and any restrictions on writing in books, etc.  Then, plan how to use those resources most efficiently and effectively and only when necessary.
  • Make good and creative use of tabs for code/rule books if allowed by the professor.

Academic Success Tip - Beware of Bad Advice

Wed, 10/14/2009 - 09:58

This week’s tips focus on bad advice that is often given out by well-intentioned students.  Critique these pieces of advice carefully and consider the alternatives.

Bad advice:  When you have someone else’s outline for the course, you don’t have to make your own outline.

Why this advice is bad advice:

  • Having the outline of someone else who did well in a course does not mean that you will do well in the course.  You will only do well if you know the material in-depth and understand it and can apply it.  Having an outline from an anonymous source is even less positive because you do not even know if the student who created it did well in the course.
  • An outline matches someone else’s learning styles and may not match how you learn material.  It also does not tell you how to apply the material to new fact scenarios – the very essence of law school exams.
  • Outlines of other students are shortcuts that avoid your having to process the information yourself.  Processing the information through your own outlines increases understanding and retention of material.
  • Outlines from prior years may not include changes in the law, changes in the professor’s approach to a subject, and changes in textbooks.  Unless you are carefully taking notes and outlining, you may miss important changes since the last time the professor taught the course.
  • When each member of a study group outlines one course and then gives her/his outline to the other study group members, the same type of problems can result.  Each study group member will know the course s/he outlined very well.  Each study group member will only have a partial understanding of the other two or three courses.

Alternatives:

  • If you have not already done so, begin NOW to process material and make your own outlines.  Use any outlines you have depended upon up to now only as comparisons.
  • Consider whether you can condense material before you put it in your own outlines so that you will not have to condense your outlines later.
  • Be efficient and effective in making your own outlines: do not include everything – include the important things that give you the bigger picture and inter-relationships.
  • Consider whether flowcharts and other visuals will be helpful for you as a way to condense the material and understand the “big picture” of the course.

Flu Shots at the Law School TODAY

Wed, 10/14/2009 - 07:49

The seasonal flu shot will be available AT THE LAW SCHOOL!  Free to all students today, Wednesday, October 14, from 11:30-1:30 and from 3:30-5:45.  The shots are free to ALL students and ALL full time faculty and staff.  Part-time faculty and staff (<80%) will be asked to pay $5.00.

 

Campus Health Services will be giving seasonal flu shots to students, faculty and staff beginning September 21, 2009. Seasonal flu shots are free to all UofL full-time students, Graduate Medical Education Residents & Fellows, and UofL faculty & staff who are at least an 80% FTE. All UofL part-time employees and retirees may get their flu shot for $5.00. ID's are required for free and discounted flu shots. All others may purchase the flu shot vaccine for $20.00 (no insurance claims will be filed).

Shots will be provided at the law school on October 14 from 11:30 AM-1:30 PM and 3:30 PM-5:45 PM.

Refer to the schedule for a complete list of times and locations.

You must complete the necessary form and take it with you in order to receive a flu shot.