Uni Stuff > Law
Books?
brenden:
--- Quote from: sam.utute on January 04, 2014, 02:53:31 pm ---Let me know what units you're talking and I'll send you through the notes I've collated. :)
--- End quote ---
I'll certainly do that when I do my timetable. Thank you very much!
ninwa:
If you only go to one lecture, go to the end of semester one where they go through a past exam, because that's where you'll see exactly how they want you to apply the principles to the problem. One of my best marks was in a subject where (as usual) I didn't go to lectures or do any readings, but only listened to the final revision lectures. Between the 3 streams, the lecturers ended up going through 4 or 5 past exams which basically covered every single kind of problem that could possibly come up and a step by step approach to answering each one. I basically walked into the exam with those sample answers, changed the names/tweaked the circumstances a little to fit the exam question, and transcribed them. Least stressful exam ever. [PS: I strongly suggest you don't play Russian roulette with your marks like this, but if something comes up... like Further... then it's a strategy you can use.]
Another good thing about going to lectures is that often your lecturer will have a chip on their shoulder about a particular judgement (e.g. one of my lecturers last semester REALLY hated one of the previous high court justices) and if you can bring that up casually in the exam you might get bonus marks (because your lecturer marks your exam). I don't know exactly how well this works and it's not really that big of a deal if you work consistently throughout semester, but if you're like me, well you need all the tips you can get :P
Sah123:
Just another question regarding books - what's the go with recommended books? Are they something worth purchasing or am I unlikely to ever reference them throughout semester? If it helps, I'm referring to the texts for criminal law and legal reasoning at Monash.
jibba:
I think for criminal law, they are useful.
I'd recommend getting Waller & Williams, Bronitt & McSherry, Clough & Mulhern and the Crimes Act.
They are all very useful, especially for policy questions, and they tend to refer to each other so it's good having them all.
I'd buy them second hand if you can find them, I bought all 4 second hand for around $200 all up :)
For ILR, probably not worth it IMO, just get the prescribed book.
zhenzhenzhen:
Anyone has The New Lawyer for sale? hahaha
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