Law School Confidential Review
Law School Confidential: A Complete Guide to the Law School experience for students by students was "a must for any visitor or do you think of Law School in Houston's attorney, and a book, the library can be found in every law student.
Law School Confidential is the States as the "Little Black Book" of law schools in the United States. More than a simple guide book for the preparation of study and examinationTips, this book will make his school a complete guide to all the law. It 'the reader through what it feels like to be in law school – and survive the first year 1L exams, summer internship law, screening interviews at graduation. The author often uses the experiences of law students under his points advantage, and that is very effective.
The book begins with a series of long chapters on the orientation ofReader through the process of entering law school. This "Beginner's Guide" is well written and comprehensive, and does a good job of introducing law school and his life for the reader. However, he feels that another dedicated to how to choose effective, to request that school.
There are some very useful information is in the shape of the curves for classification in each school and the school has no classification is available as an option. For most first-year students,This information can be critical, the first year is simply the most difficult.
The book highlights the fact that the best and most useful tips and advice often come not from his peers and professors. In most schools, students will be 2L and 3L students – teachers are often too busy to talk with individual students, or are not open enough to the exchange of information.
The strength of the book, and one that has so popular in most law studentsis its lack of meaning, conversational tone. Most law books tend to take legal mumbo jumbo to their readers – a tradition among the lawyers themselves – but this book has the depth to a minimum, and focuses on providing information that Frank is actually useful to those intended, or law school.
Where this book is that it may be too basic at times are just so preachy. Some of the research suggestions are pretty basic – that have taken up the majority of peoplethemselves during their university years. In addition, the book tries to push the specific tactics that may not be applicable to all.
However, says the lawyer in Houston, this book is definitely a must for anyone with a thinking lawyer. As the New York Law Journal has said, this is quite a "useful book is worth it."