QUOTE:
"Please let me know how easy/hard, interesting/boring, lots/little content, and the exam structure and how exam questions will needa be answered! I really would appreciate any opinions "Legal is not easy. The content can be challenging to understand. I found business management alot easier to get a 50 in. Legal was a struggle for me. It is not HARD like in methods or chem, where the logic is super tricky, but it is HARD in the sense that you have to be absolutely clear about what you say because the content is confusing at times.
Content? PWWOOOAAHHH. Legal has HEAPS AND HEAPS of content. Trust me on that one, you'll have alot to memorise. But - understanding is the key. If you can understand stuff well, memorising it is not a problem. I had like 20 pages of business notes to memorise/study at the end of the year, and with legal - my typed notes all together exceeded 70 pages. It was crazy but I enjoyed the subject.
The exam structure - it begins easy but it gets harder and harder. You have to complete 70 marks worth of stuff in 2 hours, with a massive 10 mark essay at the end. Legal is a subject where you absolutely have NO "thinking time" - you just gotta learn to write without thinking, as fast as possible. Just write and write and write as fast as you humanely can or else you'll run out of time. I always ran out of time in my legal trial exams, it was crazy.
Use PARAGRAPHS. Do not give rote learned answers. Again, use PARAGRAPHS so the examiners/assesors know exactly where to give you your marks. Start each paragraph with a VERY CLEAR idea/point that is worth 1 or 2 marks. Back up your answers with relevant examples that you can explain well. Do not just refer to an example - link it to the question and show that you actually understand how it is relevant to the exam question. Do not repeat yourself. Dicuss questions as if you're genuinely interested/understand what you're talking about.
Most importantly - for the big 8/10 mark questions - break them down into smaller paragraphs so it feel like you're answering a series of 1-2 marks questions instead of trying to juggle a massive 10 mark question.
