I have dedicated this part of my web page to helping law students navigate the stressful, and sometimes treacherous, road
to obtaining their Juris Doctor and passing the bar exam. Below are PDF versions of outline that I used to help me study for
some of my courses in law school. At the bottom of the page, you will also find a link to my famous "Bar Exam Blog". While the
bar exam blog does not tell you how to pass the bar exam, it tracks my progress as I began studying with BarBri all the way up until
the day of grade release. The purpose for my posting this blog is to demonstrate how the bar exam affects people psychologically and the
feelings of complete hopelessness that it often causes. BarBri stresses the importance of being mentally prepared for the bar examination itself,
but my experience was that the actual process of preparing was far more stressful than the actual exam itself. It is my hope that law students will
find this portion of my website useful and not allow law school or the bar exam to make them the nervous and often irritable wreck that both made me.
Administrative Law
Professor Bauer
My Grade: 3.0
Complex Litigation
Professor Underwood
My Grade: 3.0
Constitutional Litigation
Professor Finch
My Grade: 3.0
Criminal Procedure
Professor Flowers
My Grade: 3.25
Evidence
Professor Flowers
My Grade: 4.0
Jurisprudence
Professor Kaye
My Grade: 3.25
Payment Systems
Professor Adams
My Grade: 3.0
Trusts & Estates
Professor Boyer
My Grade: 2.75
My Individual Research Project on
Eco-Terrorism and the Law
Advisor: Professor Batey
The Bar Exam Blog - July 2006
Warning: Contains strong language