If i'm preparing for a very important meeting, i'd overkill on preparation. Leaving no stones unturned. Not doing this will leave me nervous and builds up into worser things.
Do this right before class, and try to live in the moment. Don’t think that you might get called on. And when it happens, answer the question in the moment, instead of thinking how others might perceive you.
Awesome! About 5% of my audience is from the Philippines. By the way, are your law classes taught in English? I was watching a movie made in your country, which had subtitles. But when the students attended law school, the professor taught in English.
I haven't studied law school yet, by the way I'm still in high school I like to watch your videos because I am interested in law, and dream of studying law school to become a full-fledged lawyer. 🙂
Hello professor Beau Baez, thank you for uploading these videos helping us viewers get a better sense of the esoteric knowledge on how to study law! I have heard some rumors and advice on choosing where to study law and was wondering if you can help demystify some of this pre-law information. Some law students applicants to apply to law schools where they want to live and settle down. On the other hand, a few law students argue that choosing schools based on where applicants want to live is no longer a practice. Is there some truth to these claims?
There is some value of attending a law school where you want to end up, but I would call it minimal. More important factors are law school prestige, class rank, law review, and interviewing skills.
The key is remembering that you can only control yourself. In other words, look internally and not externally. When you focus on what others are doing, you allow them to control you.
Hey! Whenever i sit to write a test it seems that my mind stops working and everything gets mixed up! It happens usually when I drive the car too. All the rules get mixed up! I know this is lack of practice in both the cases, but besides that what else is it?! I am unable to diagnose and work upon it. Pls kindly help! I am otherwise a bright student and confident person.
Is this actually do-able or is it completely ludicrous? I would like to be an assistant da and live in America for various reasons which I'm not going to bore you with. I live in the UK and want to go to law school in the US but can't afford it as international students don't get loans. (I know about scholarships etc but the chances of actually getting one are low). A LLB in law meets the bachelor degree requirement to be accepted into US law school. (Of course it is different for every school but in general). A year's bar school and a year's pupilage is required to become a crown prosecutor. I'd then work as a crown prosecutor for a few years, probably at least 7 and save for US law school and a house, green card and visa expenses etc. A crown prosecutor and assistant da's roles are very similar, so of course I am actually interested in the work of crown prosecutors and am not using that job as just a money source, but like I said previously, living in the US is my goal. After getting accepted into US law school (if I do of course, which hopefully I would) I'd earn a JD in law. I know about LLM degrees but from research, JD's are a lot more desirable by employers and I would like to have the same education as those I am up against for job positions to make it more of a level playing field. So back to my initial question… is this actually do-able or is it completely ludicrous? I know this "plan" sounds very long and drawn out and like the likelihood of it becoming reality are slim but I believe you have to be willing to take risks in order to succeed at anything. I also believe in order to succeed you have to believe you have something to offer to the profession which you want to pursue, which I think I do. Surely it's worth trying if it's what I really want in life? Your response, or anyones would be greatly appreciated. Thank you - Hollie
What techniques are you using to reduce your anxiety?
Living in the present
Yes!!!! And so hard to do.
If i'm preparing for a very important meeting, i'd overkill on preparation. Leaving no stones unturned. Not doing this will leave me nervous and builds up into worser things.
First year med student here, love this channel!
Thanks for watching. Many of my videos are useful for all disciplines.
you are seriously great sir. today because of you i tried to reduce my anxiety. thanks for the help :)
That’s great. Glad I was able to help.
LISS (Low Intensity Steady State) running is the ultimate anxiety killer. Minimum 25 minutes and you’re good to go.
Thank you. I’m unfamiliar with it but will read up on it.
Thank you for this! i always get extremely anxious during cold calls
Do this right before class, and try to live in the moment. Don’t think that you might get called on. And when it happens, answer the question in the moment, instead of thinking how others might perceive you.
hi i'm watching from the philippines!🇵🇭
Awesome! About 5% of my audience is from the Philippines. By the way, are your law classes taught in English? I was watching a movie made in your country, which had subtitles. But when the students attended law school, the professor taught in English.
I haven't studied law school yet, by the way I'm still in high school I like to watch your videos because I am interested in law, and dream of studying law school to become a full-fledged lawyer. 🙂
EFT Tapping is a new simple technique to try.
Hello professor Beau Baez, thank you for uploading these videos helping us viewers get a better sense of the esoteric knowledge on how to study law! I have heard some rumors and advice on choosing where to study law and was wondering if you can help demystify some of this pre-law information. Some law students applicants to apply to law schools where they want to live and settle down. On the other hand, a few law students argue that choosing schools based on where applicants want to live is no longer a practice. Is there some truth to these claims?
There is some value of attending a law school where you want to end up, but I would call it minimal. More important factors are law school prestige, class rank, law review, and interviewing skills.
How can you overcome the social anxiety in law school when everyone is very competitive and smart ? It can feel very intimidating
The key is remembering that you can only control yourself. In other words, look internally and not externally. When you focus on what others are doing, you allow them to control you.
@@Learnlawbetter thank you so much for your reply. You are the best and I love your channel !!!
Anxiety is everywhere !
Hey! Whenever i sit to write a test it seems that my mind stops working and everything gets mixed up! It happens usually when I drive the car too. All the rules get mixed up! I know this is lack of practice in both the cases, but besides that what else is it?! I am unable to diagnose and work upon it. Pls kindly help! I am otherwise a bright student and confident person.
If you see a correlation between the exam and driving a car, then on exam days don’t drive the car.
@@Learnlawbetter 😹👌
Sir I subbed you I loved your very first video I watched 🤩
Is this actually do-able or is it completely ludicrous? I would like to be an assistant da and live in America for various reasons which I'm not going to bore you with. I live in the UK and want to go to law school in the US but can't afford it as international students don't get loans. (I know about scholarships etc but the chances of actually getting one are low). A LLB in law meets the bachelor degree requirement to be accepted into US law school. (Of course it is different for every school but in general). A year's bar school and a year's pupilage is required to become a crown prosecutor. I'd then work as a crown prosecutor for a few years, probably at least 7 and save for US law school and a house, green card and visa expenses etc. A crown prosecutor and assistant da's roles are very similar, so of course I am actually interested in the work of crown prosecutors and am not using that job as just a money source, but like I said previously, living in the US is my goal. After getting accepted into US law school (if I do of course, which hopefully I would) I'd earn a JD in law. I know about LLM degrees but from research, JD's are a lot more desirable by employers and I would like to have the same education as those I am up against for job positions to make it more of a level playing field. So back to my initial question… is this actually do-able or is it completely ludicrous? I know this "plan" sounds very long and drawn out and like the likelihood of it becoming reality are slim but I believe you have to be willing to take risks in order to succeed at anything. I also believe in order to succeed you have to believe you have something to offer to the profession which you want to pursue, which I think I do. Surely it's worth trying if it's what I really want in life?
Your response, or anyones would be greatly appreciated.
Thank you - Hollie
My father is a lawyer no problem can I be lawyer same him
First one