Law exams test your ability to apply legal principles under time pressure, not simply to recall them. The most effective revision techniques are therefore active rather than passive.
1. Active Recall
Instead of re-reading notes, test yourself. Close your textbook and try to write out the key principles, cases, and statutory provisions from memory. Research consistently shows that active recall is far more effective than passive review.
2. Spaced Repetition
Review material at increasing intervals — after 1 day, then 3 days, then 7 days, then 30 days. This exploits the spacing effect, one of the most robust findings in cognitive psychology. Flashcards are ideal for spaced repetition.
3. Practice Questions
The single most valuable revision activity is answering past papers under timed conditions. This trains you to identify issues quickly, structure your answers efficiently, and manage your time.
4. One-Page Summaries
For each topic, condense your notes into a single A4 page. This forces you to identify the most important principles, cases, and statutory provisions.
5. Case Maps
Create visual case maps showing how key cases relate to each other. For example, in negligence, map out how Donoghue v Stevenson leads to Anns v Merton, which is then refined by Caparo v Dickman.
6. Study Groups
Explaining a legal concept to someone else is one of the best ways to test your understanding. Form a study group of 3-4 students and take turns presenting topics.
What NOT to Do
- Do not simply re-read your notes — this creates an illusion of knowledge.
- Do not highlight everything — if everything is highlighted, nothing is.
- Do not leave revision to the last week — law requires deep understanding that cannot be crammed.
Pro Tip
LexIQ's Quiz Generator and Flashcard system use spaced repetition algorithms to optimise your revision schedule. Generate quizzes on any topic and let the system track your mastery level.