Copy
<<First Name>>,

Back in college, I gave my cheat sheet for our engineering midterm to a girl. How do you say no to a girl? Answer: You can’t.

It had all the equations needed, but she got the lowest score in the class because she didn’t know how and when those equations applied. She hadn’t practiced applying those rules on similar problems. 

She was my gf at the time btw. Awkward! Oh well, live and learn. 

And that’s what I want to talk about—learning.

It’s not putting in the time itself that makes you better. Improvement comes from constant feedback and learning every time you try to solve a difficult problem.
 
Everything you get wrong while practicing can be a painful lesson you carry over to future instances. Embarrassment is the best way I've found to learn a lesson.
 
This seems obvious enough. Why aren’t more bar takers doing this? Why so overly concerned with memorizing (over recalling and applying rules)? Why focus on sheer quantity of questions (over reviewing answers carefully and perhaps redoing them)?
 
It feels safe. It’s hard to empathize with your future self when you could avoid full effort and blows to your ego right now.
 
It sucks when the time comes to check your answers. You can’t bring yourself to turn to the answer key.
 
In a situation where opportunities are abundant like when preparing for the bar exam, I think it’s more exciting to fail. Every failure comes with valuable data to correct course next time. [Click to tweet]

Often times, people will tell you a good reason but not the real reason. That’s completely useless except to your ego. Sure, maybe we want to guard against angry critiques (even those might be useful), but maybe we should guard against sugarcoated results too.
 
How can you take that failure and apply it later? What will you try to remember? What can you tweak and improve the next time?
 
Think of it this way:
 
What if success were 50 failures away? How excited would you be to bomb that next practice essay? [Click to tweet]
 
Whatever you’re about to do can't be worse than not seeing your name on the pass list… and the fear that closes in around you each time that happens.
 
I, too, was a struggling bar taker once (a repeater)! Nothing made sense, and I was exhausted from forcing myself to do things that weren't helping me LEARN.

My main problems with my failed bar attempt according to my score report: essays, raising issues correctly, and the MBE somewhat. Hell, everything was substandard. I thought I was good at the PTs, too.
 
The unifying cause of these problems: lack of practice.
 
Like a lot of people, I was just going through the motions of “studying”: dutifully watching lectures and reading outlines in exhaustive detail, showing off my “stressful” life to other people, and following the regimen my prep company told me to do. (Kaplan, I’m throwing you under the bus, sorry.)
 
Looking back, it wasn’t very thoughtful. Now I know that effective bar prep requires thoughtfulness.
 
It doesn't have to be exhausting if you position yourself to gain from the experience. Otherwise, it's like complaining about your daily commute instead of just moving closer to work.<

I spent way too much time memorizing and listening and “studying” and not enough time practicing and learning. It’ll get you to the point where you know the rules in theory, but will you know when to apply which ones? Knowledge is knowing a tomato is a fruit. Wisdom is not putting tomato in a fruit salad (mostly because tomatoes are gross).
 
Knowledge doesn’t give you experience or intuition.
 
On the other hand, it turns out practicing and self-critiquing your work help you accomplish everything you seek:
 
  • Getting better at identifying issues
  • Memorizing and remembering rules
  • Knowing how to apply the rules you memorized (important!)
  • Picking the right answer on the MBE more often (assuming you understand all explanations and learn from them)
  • Gaining confidence
 
In other words, practicing will help solidify everything, including memorization. [Click to tweet]
 
Once I figured it out… Now THAT was exciting. It’s only obvious in hindsight because you’re surrounded by so many stimulating and competing advice mixed with your own uncertainties and overwhelm.

It’s so easy to read a rule statement and think, “Great, got it, that’s how an offer works, duh.” It’s a different story to know when to use that rule and how to use it.
Turn on your images to see a shitty meme that I didn't make
Studying for the bar exam isn’t just “studying”; it’s preparation. Practice as if it were the real thing, and do the real thing as if it were practice. [Click to tweet]

Even then, what good is practice if you don’t learn anything from it? You might as well not have done it at all.
 
If you’re doing questions and seeing if you got the right answer/issues/rules… but not doing anything about it, that’s busy work. That’s simply measuring your current skill level—like getting on the scale, getting off, and getting right back on again hoping to see improvement.
 
You might be getting spooked by all this, but it’s actually a simple fix (even if uncomfortable): Self-critique your work.

You already know what you should do. You just have to bring just enough momentum to get started.
 
You won’t always be ready with perfect information, but you can learn it by attempting to use it anyway and filling in the gaps afterward. Using your knowledge—testing yourself—tells you what you're missing.
 
Your task on the hot seat is to solve problems correctly, not just to read or remember or understand things.
 
So stop studying, and start learning. [Click to tweet]

Solve problems now and learn from them. Exploit your knowledge, not only to solidify what you’ve studied, but to practice raising issues, applying rules, eliminating wrong choices, and picking the correct choice.

"No prize fighter can go with high spirits into the strife if he has never been beaten black and blue. The only contestant who can confidently enter the lists is the man who has seen own blood, who has felt his teeth rattle beneath his opponent's fists, who has been tripped and felt the full force of his adversary's charge, who has been downed in body, but not in spirit, one who, as often as he falls, rises again with greater defiance than ever."—Seneca

You either learn or succeed. Don't let the bar be a learning experience.
Brian

PS: Need help with buckling down and practicing? Take a look at some study tools below that you might find useful. There are plenty of samples and information so you can make an informed decision.
Recommended Tools
Click here to see catalog

Magicsheets (condensed outlines)

Stop getting overwhelmed. Focus on practice and memorization with these condensed rule outlines organized in logical groups and indentations.


Approsheets (essay approach checklists and flowcharts)

Go from blank page to finished essay/outline. Identify all the relevant issues with these attack sheets so you don't leave any points on the table.

 
Passer’s Playbook 2.0 (self-study tools)

Step-by-step blueprint, study schedules, cheat sheets, guides, and other tools designed to help you orient yourself and propel you toward improvement. Passing is inevitable if you continue to improve.


Mental Engines (mental support program)

A course on dealing with the mental and emotional aspects of bar preparation, to take you from overwhelmed to focused, unmotivated to productive, and anxious to calm.
If you enjoyed this, forward it to someone who would find this email helpful. Or just share this link anywhere you want.

If someone forwarded this to you, sign up to get your very own emails at www.makethisyourlasttime.com. Or join the MTYLT Facebook community, a private and supportive space to discuss the bar exam with others on this quest. Real profile required to keep it safe and exclusive to MTYLT readers and friends.
Share this email on Facebook
Tweet this email on Twitter
Copyright © 2019 Make This Your Last Time, All rights reserved.

You’re getting this email because you signed up to receive insights for bar prep at www.makethisyourlasttime.com or someone forwarded it to you.

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe

My mailing address:
Brian Hahn
Make This Your Last Time
888 S Hope St
Unit 2616
Los Angeles, California 90017

Add us to your address book


Email Marketing Powered by Mailchimp