• Congratulations to the Class of 2024 on your results!
    Let us know how you went here
    Got a question about your uni preferences? Ask us here

Psychology and law notes - first year? (1 Viewer)

SanjoyM

Member
Joined
Apr 7, 2011
Messages
691
Gender
Male
HSC
2012
Hey Guys,

'Does anybody have any first year psychology and law notes? If you do, could you please share ? (Preferably UWS or UNSW) :)
Also, how should I preprare and study for these courses in particular?

Thank you! Much appreciated.

San! :)
 
Joined
Oct 19, 2011
Messages
62
Gender
Male
HSC
2011
Don't know about law, but really, it is not necessary to prepare for psychology or most courses for that matter. Psychology for example, you will learn everything you need to know during the course such as how to write a psychology report (fairly similar to science reports in high school). But if you really wish to prepare yourself for uni work, I do recommend you become very familiar with Harvard and APA referencing because the uni lecturers/tutors do not teach you how to reference, and correct referencing is very important throughout all the research assessments you will be doing. This is a good start http://www.lc.unsw.edu.au/onlib/ref.html
 

alstah

Member
Joined
Mar 28, 2009
Messages
510
Location
Sydney
Gender
Male
HSC
2011
Uni Grad
2016
Law is all about solving problems - in particular, solving problems in time-pressured exam situation, delivering a concise, legal argument.

1. Everyone will tell you to do so, and I know initially you won't believe me and you won't listen, but...DO NOT READ CASES. They are so confusing and impossible to understand! the judges ramble on and on trying to impress each other. Your there to get good grades. Reading cases does not help you do that! Law school is about one thing and one thing only...doing well on final exams! Law school exams are PROBLEM questions. You need to learn how to resolve problems in a concise, legal argument. Get a textbook which summarises cases for you - which extracts particular cases and gives you a brief summary of the facts and the relevant holding gets a few of these books and just SKIM through the actual case/judgement don't read it word for word because you've read the textbook summaries you know what's important in the case - the various summaries have guided you to the important parts o just skim over that and make note of important parts. People read cases very religiously it depends on the subject for contracts its intro to contract law by Graw, Pearson law briefs are a personal favourite of mine tbh just go in your library and look around (ur uni's law library) and find the relevant textbooks. (Don't get the established textbooks like Balkin & Davis/Fleming for Torts or Carter for Contracts - these are academic textbooks meant for academics, they hardly help you in law school.

2. Do past papers/practice problem questions. You can't just expect to memorise the law and go into an exam, and solve a hypothetical problem question with no experience you need to practice DAILY the skills of issue spotting and resolving the issues the best is past papers - but sometimes these aren't the best option if they don't have sample solutions. I recommend Butterworths Q&A they give sample questions + answers in concise legal language. I highly recommend reading: "How to write law essays and exams" by Strong she has a PhD from Cambridge and a DPhil from Oxford and a Master's in Professional Writing its the one book you must read BEFORE you start law school and one semester after, during the holidays. (if your only doing foundations of law in sem 1, then i'd hold it back to sem 1 holidays and then review it again at the end of the year) if you do those 2 things you'd be head and shoulders above the rest.

3. Keep condensing your notes. Mastering law studies and law exam techniques by Richard Krever is a MUST. I usually make my case summary notes 2 weeks BEFORE the lecture which covers that content (and try my hand with problem questions from Q&A books in the meantime). I make a table, 2 columns - one column, my summary of the case, the second column what the LECTURER states about the case. These are my COMPREHENSIVE notes. I do not study from these notes. I make review notes - based around legal issues, not cases and study them consistently, and refine them using the Q&A book (which shows how to apply the law). I keep condensing the review notes till I have a cheat sheet which I can take into the exam (16 pages summarising the entire course - perfect for an open book exam). If its a closed book exam, I memorise the 16 pages.


In short, 2 things before uni starts:
1. Read Mastering law studies and law exam techniques / Richard Krever.
2. Read Strong's 'how to write law essays and exams'

I essentially followed this during my first year of USyd Law and ended up with a 80+ WAM which puts me in a fantastic position for geting into USyd First class honours, when the time comes.

I can give you all my law notes for free, upon request. (message me).
 
Last edited:

wannaspoon

ремове кебаб
Joined
Aug 8, 2012
Messages
1,401
Gender
Male
HSC
2007
Uni Grad
2014
http://www.nickdowse.com/lawnotes/

problem???

just make sure you change certain details to accommodate for jurisdiction, etc... got referred to it I personally did not find it helpful at all...

a lot of marks to be made in small areas also; things like: grammar, punctuation, spelling and complying with AGLC can pretty much get you like 20% of your mark... have fun...
 
Last edited:

SanjoyM

Member
Joined
Apr 7, 2011
Messages
691
Gender
Male
HSC
2012
Thank you so much to everyone for their inputs and replies!! Much appreciated :)
have been infrequent on this site.
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top