Master of Memory: Accelerated learning, education, memorization - MMem 0552: Reprise: How to memorize information for the bar exam
Episode Date: April 19, 2016Reprise: How to memorize information for the bar exam Working out is good for our bodies, but our brain reaps many benefits as well. Exercise can improve learning and memory, so if you’re having wri...ter’s block or just can’t seem to get through that tough math problem, try walking it off or squeezing in a […]
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Hey guys, this is Timothy, and I'm publishing a book.
Now, this may not be new news to all of you,
but I bring it up because it's temporarily changing some things here on the show.
We're going to be running a series of reprise episodes for the next few weeks
due to my need to focus exclusively on this writing project.
The book is going to cover absolutely everything about language hacking
that I've learned from years of working directly with fluency coaching students and native speaking coaches to see what truly works and gets amazing results.
It's going to be a high-end book with the hardcover copy priced at around $40, and that's if I can keep it as short as I'd like to keep it.
But as podcast listeners, you can actually get a free digital copy of the book if you sign up early.
Just go to Spanishin1month.com, and you'll be on the early bird list to get access to the book the day that it's released.
Meanwhile, for now, enjoy this rerun of one of my favorite episodes from the last few months.
Welcome to Master of Memory. I'm Timothy, and I'm here to answer your accelerated learning questions every day and to inspire and
empower you to learn anything you want to learn faster than ever. Justin submitted a written
question at masterofmemory.com slash question. Justin says, I'm currently studying for the bar
exam and need some help refining techniques
to memorize and encode the mounds of legal rules and doctrines which are capable of being tested
these can range from contracts to criminal law to wills and trusts and everything in between i have
an understanding of mnemonics and memory palaces but could really use help in refining the ability
to utilize these tools to their full potential so So Justin, the issue with this project is that things are very likely to
be different between states. So your bar exam in your state will be likely to be different from
the bar exam in another state, and it's quite a project. It'd be something that I'd be interested
in communicating about and working on over email. But yeah, between different states or different
countries, it'll be quite different. But I can still give you some suggestions in this episode,
and then you can kind of work on them to a further extent on your own or with me if we
communicate by email, timothyatmasterofmemory.com. From my research, and according to Wikipedia,
most law schools prepare you to analyze hypothetical fact
patterns like a lawyer, but they don't specifically prepare you for the exam. So if you've been in a
school that is teaching you this stuff, it's not necessarily going to help you with the information
that you need for the exam. So it's kind of interesting to note that you're kind of left
to do that on your own. You're left to do all of the prep for the exam itself pretty much on
your own, which is a little bit strange. They don't work on that with you in the school. Now,
there is an abundance of books and online resources, but for me, I think that having so
many resources out there makes the approach to the test seem kind of scattered or it makes it
more difficult because you have the paradox of choice. You have all these
different options for preparing and you don't have a single system. So what we really need to do and
what I would suggest that you focus on is kind of like in the previous episode where you take all
the tactics and you just put them together into step-by-step system for learning a language.
In this episode, I'm suggesting that you create a system that you can follow
step-by-step so that you can be confident that at every moment along the way, you're preparing the best way you reasonably can.
You don't feel unfocused, but you know exactly what to work on at every given time, every given time, at any given point.
So again, it's going to be based on your state, but based on the principles of exclusivity and mnemonics, although I won't
really go into detail on the mnemonics here, I'm going to present sort of a few-step system,
a four-step system, where based on the principle of exclusivity and then you can implement
the mnemonics on your own, you can just go through the process like a checklist.
So here's the first of the four steps. Collect three resources that you think
you can depend on. So three resources that you think will be very good guides
or very good resources that will tell you what's going to be on the exam. So
maybe you'll have one resource that's general and then you'll find two
different resources, one textbook and one online, that describes specifically
what's on the exam for your state. Now, what
you're going to do with these resources is do a quick assessment to find out what areas are most
likely to be covered on the test. It sounds like you kind of have an idea because you're kind of
talking about contracts and criminal law and so on, but assess these things fairly deeply and
assess what you think is most likely to be on the test.
That's your first step.
Don't do anything else until you're done with that step.
Step two, decide on separate memory palaces for these separate areas.
Since they are considered to be separate areas and the test will probably treat them as such,
it's good to have them in separate places so that you can just put yourself in a separate mindset when you're working on those different things.
So it's good to have a separate memory palace for each of those areas. Before doing anything else, just be ready to separate
all of the things that you've assessed will be areas on the test into those separate memory
palaces. So choose your memory palaces. You don't have to build them yet. Just go ahead and choose
them for all of those topics. When that's done, number three,
find the most frequently referenced topics within a particular area and start memorizing this
information, storing it mnemonically in its palace. So let's say that you're working on
contracts right now. Find the most frequently referenced topics within that area. Maybe there are, you know, a million terms,
but there are 10 that just keep coming up over and over again
or 10 topics that keep coming up over and over again.
Maybe even 10 cases that keep coming up over and over again.
I really don't know how it would work,
but you probably, in listening to this,
you know where I'm going with this
or you know how you can apply it.
Find just the few things that are referenced the most, and start storing that information mnemonically in the one palace
that you're focused on. Now to find these things, if you're not sure which ones are the most frequent,
it may be that if there are terms, for example, the index tactic that I talk about will help you
look in the back of the book, in the index at the back of the book, and see which
terms are referenced the most. And so that could help, but if it's an online resource, maybe just
search the web page and see which terms or which references come up the most. So the ones that are
used the most, start storing them mnemonically in your memory palace in very prominent places.
If you're working, again, first on contracts, then go to your
contract memory palace and put, maybe you have a palace with 20 rooms, put the 20 most used terms
in big images in the biggest, most central places in each room in that house. So again, you're
picking just one topic to do that with and the most important 10 to 20 terms or facts
within that topic. And then based on how that's gone, step 4 is simply to move
forward based on that. You might go ahead and try to fill in the rest of the
information for that particular area, or if after doing it it seems better, you
might just go ahead and find the most exclusive important information in the
other areas
and treat them the same way you treated that first area.
So if I was doing this project, Justin, that's how I would approach it.
And again, it may be a large enough project that you'll want to communicate with me over time by email,
and I'd be happy to give you some support that way.
Just email me at timothy at masterofmemory.com.
For everyone
listening, if you think that what I'm doing with this podcast is cool, if you've liked this episode
or anything else that you've listened to on this podcast, please share it with a friend or at least
leave us an iTunes review. What do you want to learn? The world's knowledge can be yours.
Leave your learning request at masterofmemory.com slash question and i'll talk to you again soon