For two years I studied a lot. I tried as hard as I could. I worried about it a lot. I followed all the advice people usually dish out in law school. Nothing worked.
I had some disadvantages to start with. Bad English (I studied in the vernacular medium before I joined law school). Lack of focus unless something big was at stake.
But I wanted to. And I had topped the law entrance so I expected that I should top the semester exams also.
Well, that was not happening.
For all those who just wrote CLAT, please take note. The girl who was topping in every semester in my class, often scoring perfect 7s, had a not so good rank in the entrance exam.
I felt horrible when I kept trying harder and my rank actually went down even more. I usually ranked between 11th and 15th.
Then I gave up. I said let it be. There must be some other way to succeed in life.
Well, that was the smartest thing to do.
My rank kept improving after that, when I was not any more making it the only focus of my life! Remarkably,
How did this happen?
Firstly, I became more strategic about studying and scoring marks.
I had less time to prepare, so I had to put in laser-sharp focus on what would get me more marks. I planned according to what will fetch me more marks rather than just learning the subject by reading books and notes.
Learning is different than scoring marks in class. Once you get that straight, you start scoring well. My understanding of what it takes to score well has evolved since, through my experience as a researcher,
Nobody will see the sweat and tears you have put into learning something. Nobody is going to take a peek inside your brain.
Without further ado, let me share some important principles that will help you to do well academically
My mentees have topped in class in top NLUs and traditional universities.
Before I proceed further, let me one thing clear though. There is a tactical difference between how you go about things,
For example, if you are studying in an NLU or Symbiosis or Amity,
That has to be factored into your preparation. However,
So what are these principles?
It’s not enough if you know a lot, the teacher needs to see how much effort you are putting in
Academicians are human beings like all of us.
Most colleges have projects, assignments, class participation marks, presentation, moot or viva (oral examination) marks that is allocated by your subject teacher. If your teacher thinks highly of you, then you will get more marks.
It is great if you know a lot about a subject. For example, I loved family law and knew a lot about it. However, my final score it was very average.
On the other hand, the teachers I genuinely liked, and approached again and again for advice, or went up to them for suggestions about my research or about an article,
Attend classes and pay attention.
Or do something else that will move you ahead in life during the class time. I used to either engage in my hobby of writing poetry,
But you need to appear to be engaged in the class. Do not just sit like a puppet through the class. Ask a few intelligent questions. Contribute to the class discussion from time to time.
Still, if you do not attend classes, you will lose marks. Most colleges have marks for attendance. Leaving that aside, if you don’t attend classes, the teacher is less likely to give you good marks.
Projects and assignments
Scoring well in projects or other assignments is usually critical to doing well in a course.
If you have been allocated a boring dead bit topic,
Remember that presentation is often more important than content, because teachers do not read your project, assignment or even the exam papers thoroughly. Hence, the importance of the presentation.
Remember that your assignment or answer needs to stand out. How will that happen? You need to think about that and execute accordingly.
Most teachers are hard pressed for time, and have to correct way too many papers.
This is true for everything, from exam papers to projects or class participation.
In a place like NUJS, everyone wrote the correct answer. Almost everyone at least! So just giving the correct answer gets you average or even below average marks. You need to do more to score top marks.
For every subject and different teacher, what this extra consists of would be different.
Ask the teachers what do you have to do to score very high and top the class
Different teachers have different preferences and standards.
So here is what to do: meet the teacher separately (not in class) and ask him or her what you would need to read, study and how to prepare so you can score the highest in his class. How should I prepare for the exam?
This kind of preparation is unthinkable for most law students.
It may seem like a lot of work, but trust me this would reduce the amount of work you will actually have to do, and increase your success rate like you have never seen.
Here is the thing. Your stellar grade will help you to an extent. But do not become too narrowly focused on it or too elated about it.
Let me tell you a story. I started guiding a very smart and driven girl in her 2nd year in college.
When she was beginning her 4th year, I advised her to work on other practical projects. She thought that this will take away her focus on exam.
It was not. She did not get a top tier law firm job she had hoped for despite amazing rank. There were many gaps in her personality, ability to work with a team, or finding solutions.
However, I just want to tell you that topping in the class is not as hard as succeeding as a lawyer.
Learn practical skills. Learn how to deliver great results to your clients. Those abilities will always eventually trump scoring top marks in law school.