Told you I'd be posting about this damn thing again.
Last year, I was so mentally screwed that I was just grabbing at issues and such instead of presenting the information. But I was REAL close to passing. So I figure it I iron out some of that and present the information more clearly start-to-finish, that might make the difference.
I sent a friend a copy of a short-ish essay question, one of the Bar's sample answer, and may answer--to get his opinion. The sample answer is supposed to be one of the "best," scoring 75 or 80, I'm told. I thought mine was pretty good--I had the right issues, adequate rule of law, some decent application. All easy to read. My friend thought I might get 62.5....maybe passing. Maybe. I figured I was a solid 65.
No, I don't believe that. That was a decent answer. He said that he didn't like the form of it. Huh? I figured that I was close to the sample, though I flubbed one thing a bit, but that might not matter so much. So, rather than change what I'm doing, when it seems to fit what another friend and I had figured out should work for me (he's literally a frickin' genius), I'm continuing with my way. Maybe adapt a little.
But I got discouraged. Hubby could tell. He said to ignore my friend, continue on, and do the best I can. He said that since I likely won't work in the field even if I do pass, it doesn't matter. And that if what I'm doing now isn't what the Bar wants, then not to worry. The judges I did work for liked what I did (they liked it a lot), so I have proof that I can do work that is more than acceptable. Just maybe not the way the Bar wants.
But it's still a bit disheartening. I just want to pass, just to be able to say I fought it and won. This is personal to me. I went to law school, not so much to become a lawyer, but to get some self-confidence. I have that, well, somewhat. But it would be nice to have that license on the wall.
My sister told me that she sees a lot of law licenses at the Goodwill, so if I dont pass, go to Goodwill and buy someone's license and photoshop my name onto a picture of it.
Last year, I was so mentally screwed that I was just grabbing at issues and such instead of presenting the information. But I was REAL close to passing. So I figure it I iron out some of that and present the information more clearly start-to-finish, that might make the difference.
I sent a friend a copy of a short-ish essay question, one of the Bar's sample answer, and may answer--to get his opinion. The sample answer is supposed to be one of the "best," scoring 75 or 80, I'm told. I thought mine was pretty good--I had the right issues, adequate rule of law, some decent application. All easy to read. My friend thought I might get 62.5....maybe passing. Maybe. I figured I was a solid 65.
No, I don't believe that. That was a decent answer. He said that he didn't like the form of it. Huh? I figured that I was close to the sample, though I flubbed one thing a bit, but that might not matter so much. So, rather than change what I'm doing, when it seems to fit what another friend and I had figured out should work for me (he's literally a frickin' genius), I'm continuing with my way. Maybe adapt a little.
But I got discouraged. Hubby could tell. He said to ignore my friend, continue on, and do the best I can. He said that since I likely won't work in the field even if I do pass, it doesn't matter. And that if what I'm doing now isn't what the Bar wants, then not to worry. The judges I did work for liked what I did (they liked it a lot), so I have proof that I can do work that is more than acceptable. Just maybe not the way the Bar wants.
But it's still a bit disheartening. I just want to pass, just to be able to say I fought it and won. This is personal to me. I went to law school, not so much to become a lawyer, but to get some self-confidence. I have that, well, somewhat. But it would be nice to have that license on the wall.
My sister told me that she sees a lot of law licenses at the Goodwill, so if I dont pass, go to Goodwill and buy someone's license and photoshop my name onto a picture of it.