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Mississippi Bar Exam Study Material
Posted on 6/11/25 at 10:54 am
Posted on 6/11/25 at 10:54 am
Has anyone here taken the Mississippi bar and can offer any recommendations for best bar prep materials to get online? Thanks
Posted on 6/11/25 at 10:59 am to Tyghas
You have to take an exam to work in Mississippi?
Posted on 6/11/25 at 10:59 am to Tyghas
Two questions on that exam:
1. Define the concept of grits under the Mississippi Rules of Grits.
2. What is a yoot?
Good luck!
1. Define the concept of grits under the Mississippi Rules of Grits.
2. What is a yoot?
Good luck!
Posted on 6/11/25 at 11:01 am to Tyghas
Easily the most random question I've heard today.
Posted on 6/11/25 at 11:01 am to Artificial Ignorance
quote:
Two questions on that exam:
1. Define the concept of grits under the Mississippi Rules of Grits.
2. What is a yoot?
Good luck!
My Cousin Vinny was set in Alabama.
Posted on 6/11/25 at 11:01 am to Tyghas
The most useful resource is the sample questions and answers from Barbri.
The way I recommend studying for the bar exam is:
Step 1: look at a sample question and hand write out the sample answer word for word
Step 2: copy that answer while looking off of the sample, but put it in your own words
Step 3: answer the same question without looking at any of those copies
Step 4: answer a similar fact pattern but not the same exact sample question
Step 5: repeat this process for every style of sample question for each book of the exam
This brute forth method will encode the formula for analyzing each question, so you’re going to get most of the points. On the exam, most questions will follow a similar pattern to something you have seen before, so you’ll have developed muscle memory to jump in and work those patterns out in ways that should get you most of the points in a timely manner.
The way I recommend studying for the bar exam is:
Step 1: look at a sample question and hand write out the sample answer word for word
Step 2: copy that answer while looking off of the sample, but put it in your own words
Step 3: answer the same question without looking at any of those copies
Step 4: answer a similar fact pattern but not the same exact sample question
Step 5: repeat this process for every style of sample question for each book of the exam
This brute forth method will encode the formula for analyzing each question, so you’re going to get most of the points. On the exam, most questions will follow a similar pattern to something you have seen before, so you’ll have developed muscle memory to jump in and work those patterns out in ways that should get you most of the points in a timely manner.
This post was edited on 6/11/25 at 11:03 am
Posted on 6/11/25 at 11:03 am to Tyghas
suck it up and pay for barbri
Posted on 6/11/25 at 11:05 am to kingbob
Kingbob - Did you take the Barbri online classes?
If so, were they good with telling you what is normally asked on the exam? I took the Louisiana Barbri many years ago (and passed the bar) and I remember the teacher mostly telling us what is and isn't on the exam.
If so, were they good with telling you what is normally asked on the exam? I took the Louisiana Barbri many years ago (and passed the bar) and I remember the teacher mostly telling us what is and isn't on the exam.
Posted on 6/11/25 at 11:06 am to redstickrick
quote:
suck it up and pay for barbri
Yeah, I'm trying to decide if I should do Barbri or Kaplan (or one of the many other services I am finding online).
redstickrick - Did you take Barbri?
This post was edited on 6/11/25 at 11:07 am
Posted on 6/11/25 at 11:18 am to Tyghas
I’m taking Barbri.
I find the multistate/common law infuriating (as a Louisiana lawyer).
You end up learning traditional common law, “the modern view”, and then Mississippi distinctions. It’s pretty overwhelming and has me dreading the essays. The multiple choice is a breeze in comparison.
I find the multistate/common law infuriating (as a Louisiana lawyer).
You end up learning traditional common law, “the modern view”, and then Mississippi distinctions. It’s pretty overwhelming and has me dreading the essays. The multiple choice is a breeze in comparison.
This post was edited on 6/11/25 at 11:19 am
Posted on 6/11/25 at 11:34 am to Tyghas
Mississippi College School of Law for the win!!
Posted on 6/11/25 at 11:52 am to DVA Tailgater
DVA Tailgater
Is Barbri telling you what areas to focus on and not focus on?
Are you taking online courses or just studying the materials?
Is Barbri telling you what areas to focus on and not focus on?
Are you taking online courses or just studying the materials?
Posted on 6/11/25 at 11:54 am to Tyghas
call 1-888-765-4382 Ask For Jake Brigance
This post was edited on 6/11/25 at 12:43 pm
Posted on 6/11/25 at 12:38 pm to Tyghas
Just buy Barbri and do at least 80% of the lessons/homework.
Look at old test questions from last 5 or so years.
Look at old test questions from last 5 or so years.
Posted on 6/11/25 at 12:49 pm to Tyghas
quote:
I took the Louisiana Barbri many years ago (and passed the bar) and I remember the teacher mostly telling us what is and isn't on the exam
The LA bar exam was all essay...at least it was ~20 years ago.
I think Mississippi is a 2 day exam, with one day being solely a multi-state multiple choice format.
Everyone is different. When I took the Barbri classes for the LA exam I eventually stopped going because I felt my time was better suited working practice exams/questions ad nauseum. That worked for me and I took the same approach studying for another state's exam (which was similar to the MS exam). But you have to know what works best for you. I'm sure there is a benefit to the classes. I guess the question is, for you, how much do you think it will be? I know I'm a MUCH better self-studier/learner than listener
Posted on 6/11/25 at 12:50 pm to Ash Williams
quote:
My Cousin Vinny was set in Alabama.
Know dat. Hand grenades and horseshoes…
Posted on 6/11/25 at 1:17 pm to Tyghas
I took the in-person Barbri, but I didn’t really get much out of the classes. I got my mileage out of the book of old test questions and sample answers which I worked on my own.
Posted on 6/11/25 at 1:26 pm to Tyghas
quote:
Is Barbri telling you what areas to focus on and not focus on? Are you taking online courses or just studying the materials?
I started in mid March. Each day, it gives me a study plan (which videos to watch, practice questions, or re-read the material.)
Since I started in March, I’ve now reached the part where they’re going over Mississippi specific law. The problem is, Mississippi hasn’t yet released what their essays will be on. Conceivably, I’m learning irrelevant law.
At this point, I’m likely better off doing practice questions and essays until Mississippi releases the schedule. And start drilling down the elements of every dang thing.
The essays are a dang beast, and some rest really off the wall stuff. The other day, I did a Crim Pro essay, and the prompt was longer than most pleadings. Model answers will humble you. I’ve been practicing law for 12 years. Going back to bar exam land is so counterintuitive.
Also common law sucks. I don’t know how you baws do it. Garbage law.
This post was edited on 6/11/25 at 1:28 pm
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