Reddit Reddit reviews Strategies & Tactics for the MPRE: (Multistate Professional Responsibility Exam) (Bar Review)

We found 1 Reddit comments about Strategies & Tactics for the MPRE: (Multistate Professional Responsibility Exam) (Bar Review). Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

Books
Law
Professional Responsibility & Law Ethics
Strategies & Tactics for the MPRE: (Multistate Professional Responsibility Exam) (Bar Review)
Check price on Amazon

1 Reddit comment about Strategies & Tactics for the MPRE: (Multistate Professional Responsibility Exam) (Bar Review):

u/Sailor_Callisto ยท 1 pointr/LawSchool

Assuming you fed ct class allows for an outline, I would spend 3 days working on your Fed Ct outline and skimming over the parts of the reading you haven't finished. Then spend the next 4 days doing PR - making flashcards/writing out rules/whatever memorization tricks work for you and doing tons of practice multiple choice questions. Check your library for MPRE books, they should have them. Then after you're PR final, day 1 work on your 3rd exam. Day 2 and 3 work on your Fed Ct final and then after your Fed Ct final, work on your 3rd exam.

​

PS some tips about PR - look for a free MPRE course from Kaplan or Barbri to get practice questions. PR, and more importantly, the MPRE are about practicing multi's until you can see the pattern/tricks that the test makers use to confuse you. I'm hoping that your teacher is doing a closed book PR exam to mimic the MPRE. Also, get this book. It will help you understand how PR questions are written and how multi's can trick you for every sub-section of PR rules.

​

What worked well for me for PR was to be in a study room and to write out the rules on a white board, but obviously do whatever works best for you in terms of memorization. Unfortunately, PR is one of those subjects where you will need to memorize the rules. With that being said, understand that some rules are probably going to be tested more often than others. Also, don't neglect studying the prosecutor's rules and the judge's rules. I made that mistake and my exam had ~5-6 questions on those rules.