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The missing link in CLAT preparation – learn to manage your nerves, be in the right state of mind

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CLAT preparation

What determines your performance on the D-day?

I have seen many students who prepared well for an entrance exam, topped many mock tests – but simply failed to make the cut on the day that mattered. In fact, it happened to me many times. Probably you have gone through it too.

You are prepared, but something unexpected happens, throws you off track and all the preparation and effort goes down the drain.

We can’t afford that, can we?

No exam preparation is complete unless you prepare for unexpected events – for handling shockers. How do you handle shockers? How can you be prepared for the unforeseen situations?

You can do that only by achieving a control over your state of mind.

No preparation is not complete unless you have control over your state of mind. If you are too stressed out, if you are tired or sleepy, if you are too excited or agitated to focus – God help you.

Survive exam blues

Tension. Anxiety. Nerves. How do you deal with these things before an exam? Especially if it is an exam which is a gateway for you to a world you have been fantasizing about for a while now, for which you have prepared for months? It is a necessity that you be at your best during the two hours of the exam. Alert, feeling sharp and energetic. There are a dozen things to worry about – length of paper, difficulty level, strange GK questions. Last thing you want to come between you and your law schools dream is your own anxiety which may compromise your performance. What’s the best way to deal with exam blues?

Acknowledge your fears

Look, no one likes exams much. That’s the natural order of things. Some of us are positively scared of exams. Acknowledge it to yourself. Realise how afraid you are. Don’t sweep it under the carpet, face it right now. And then tell yourself that it’s alright to be afraid. Some anxiety is productive. It can be used to propel yourself faster, harder. You have been waiting for this moment for a long time. You are going to fight it hard, you won’t give an inch without a fight. Channel your anxiety into a fighting spirit.

Four practices for achieving control over your nerves

There are a few things you can do to achieve the perfect mental state during a test.

First, rehearse. Take mock tests. Attempt to solve past years papers in less time than the allotted time. This practice of testing yourself under adverse conditions will make your nerves used to such pressure. In short, practice taking tests a lot (solve a couple of past years papers right now if you haven’t been doing that yet).

 

Second, motivate yourself. Close your eyes and imagine yourself at the law school of your dreams. You would even feel a little thrilled about the exam, as this is the one exam that is going to transform your life. From school to law school. Your way to a rich, fast-track lifestyle; or a key to your empowerment for changing the lives of others in a few years down the line.

See the big picture. Visualise where you want to be. Know in your heart that that is where you belong. Feel calm, feel at home with your dreams. Know that you will achieve them. CLAT is just a small step in the whole scheme. This battle will be won, there is no other way. Writing CLAT and doing well is just an eventuality.

Feel at home with the idea that you are destined to make it through to CLAT. Taking the exam and acing is just a matter of course.

 

Third, this is really interesting. This draws on the strength of your subconscious mind, and is a terrific hack to prepare your conscious mind to battle fiercely without feeling the pressure. Before sleeping every night from now on till before CLAT, as you lie in your bed, close your eyes and imagine being in the exam hall. Imagine the bell ring, and the feel the paper kept in front of you, waiting to be opened, waiting for you to start solving. Imagine the tip of your pencil touching the red and white mosaic of the OMR sheet. Feel the anxious tension, like you are about to be launched. Like you are about to be unleashed on the paper with all your alertness and attention, destroying the problems one by one. It’s a hard battle, but you know the ending of this story. You are winning.

Read the previous paragraph before you go to sleep tonight. And imagine this before you fall asleep. Your brain and mind will take care of the rest. Let me know if you get tensed or nervous while taking the real test after doing this on three consecutive nights.

 

Fourth, meditate. This one is totally optional. There is no one correct way of meditating. Even going on very long distance run on your own can have a meditative effect on the brain (positive effects of meditation on human brain is a scientifically proven phenomenon). Find your own way to meditate – or learn it from someone. Doing it once a day will reduce the fear and anxiety inducing centres in your brain – and help you to remain calm so that you can take good decisions and focus even in the most unnerving situations.

I wish I could take a live session with you guys sometimes and demonstrate the immediate effect of these techniques on your guys – but that is not possible. Please try to do it yourself right away – and you are very likely to see great results.

Good luck.

 

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Internship Myths that might be sabotaging you

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internship at a top law firm

This article is written by Ramanuj Mukherjee, Co-founder & CEO at iPleaders.

Let’s talk about common myths about internships.

Internship Myth# 1

I am too young to apply for this internship

Well, you are probably not. I have seen 2nd-year students interning at top law firms. I interned at AZB, AMSS and JSA when I was in 3rd year. Numerous other people get to do the same. The reality is that getting internship does not always depend on merit. You need to be at the right place at the right time. Otherwise, you need people who can recommend you (I am not one of those people). Law firms and in-house legal departments are full of interns who came based on a recommendation from a client or a partner or even a senior associate. If you don’t have “dad’s contacts” (although they are useful for those who have it), that is no excuse for not getting a recommendation –– you must strive to network and build some good will.

 

Internship Myth# 2

Doing this internship will increase my CV value and then I can get the internship I really want.

The reality is that there are plenty of idiots in the job market who have done internships at the top firms and big companies. Those few lines in the CV about your internship at a certain firm is not a hallmark of your quality and talent. Law firm partners and recruiters, who themselves have to oblige a lot of people by recommending their sons and daughters for internships know this very well. While I was an associate, I have come across many interns who were absolute morons and I would never want to hire them.

Hence, you are making a fool of yourself if you think interning at a certain place will improve your profile and for that reasons you are sacrificing the three objectives of internship described above. At the end of the day, your personality and presence of mind (when you are in front of them), and the language of your cover letter/ how you present your CV (when you are corresponding) will tell them a lot about your abilities than a place where you have interned. I see so many CVs and cover letters with grammatical/ spelling errors that it is not funny. A lawyer will be very wary of hiring someone who makes spelling mistakes in a CV irrespective of where that person has interned.

 

Internship Myth# 3

All my friends are interning this summer, if I don’t intern I’ll lose out.

Intern when you are really focussed on the three objectives, not otherwise. If you want to work at a law firm, interning at a NGO is not going to improve your chance of getting a law firm job. If you really want to work at an NGO, it may not be a smart thing killing your soul at a PSU or a law firm internship.

Decide, and stick to it. What you actually do should be aligned with your ultimate goals. If you don’t get the internship that will help your career goal, don’t go for some random internship just for the sake of it. That is not professional. You’ll waste your own and other people’s times.

 

Internship Myth# 4

People who set my college curriculum knows where I should intern

I am aware of the fact that your college probably prescribes specific types of internships. You are supposed to do NGO internship in first year, trial court in second year, Supreme court in third year and law firm in 4th year. Right?

Well – only if ever there was such a clear formula.

The only year in which I did what I was supposed to do according to the curriculum was in the first year – I interned at 2 NGOs. Then I soon realized that I don’t want to do litigation, why should I waste my time in trial courts? Instead, I interned with a historian, Ramachandra Guha, researching in quaint libraries in Kolkata on an alleged romantic relationship between Gandhi and a niece of Rabindranath Tagore. I also worked with IMS, which went on to set the stage for the work I did later with CLAThacker. In my third year, I just interned with 3 law firms back to back. In my 4th year I didn’t intern at all, instead choosing to do my own work. Did any of these stop me from getting a law firm job, the career of my choice at that time? Absolutely not.

 

Myth 6#

I am not from an NLU, I will never get this internship

If you are reading this article till here, give yourself some credit. You are good enough to get any internship.

Yes it is easier to get internships from NLUs, but students from other colleges are also doing internships. If you are not from an NLU, you probably need to work harder towards getting an internship, but giving up or using this as an excuse is totally stupid. At Trilegal, which hires a lot of students from NLUs and pays one of the best salaries, I have met lawyers from all sorts of colleges which are not so famous. They are there because they do good work. You need to learn the ropes well, you need to reach, you need to do things that will get you noticed, but not being from an NLU does not close doors to good internships for you. How can you do it? More on that on another article – I write about things that law students care about in this space every Friday. You can find me on twitter here: https://twitter.com/law_ninja and subscribe to my updates here: http://fb.me/ramanujm  

 

Conclusion:

Focus on learning, figuring out what you like and getting a job when you are interning. The rest is most probably nonsense. Do not do an internship that does not fulfil these objectives – you might be better off reading a thriller at home.

 

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Tejaswinee Roychowdhury, a practising lawyer, on why she enrolled for the NUJS MA in Business Laws program

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TejaswineeTejaswinee Roychowdhury did her did B.A.LL.B (Hons) from Department of Law, University of Calcutta and is currently practicing as an advocate at Kolkata High court. She is currently pursuing the MA in Business Law course from NUJS. Over her, she shares why she chose to do an online course in business law after completing her LLB and her experience with the course so far. Over to Tejaswinee:

When I was interning at Sinha and Co., the senior there told me about NLSIU MBL Course. So when I searched for that one, its syllabus structure disappointed me and I started looking for other options. That’s when I came across NUJS MA in Business Laws course and found its syllabus structure more suited to my needs.

When I looked at the course content, I found the specialization in Intellectual Property and Cyber Law which is a unique mix which is not being offered by any other institution.  Since I have a keen interest in Intellectual Property Rights and I believe this combination of IPR and Cyber Law will be very useful for me, I decided to enroll for the course.

The course content and modules have been designed in a way which makes them very helpful. The B.A. LL.B. (Hons) is mostly theory based and we are hardly introduced to the practicality of law practice. However, this course focuses on the practical aspects and I feel that is really helpful.  Even learning on the job sometimes cannot teach you everything because you need to be working in a particular field to learn about it on the job.  For example, I have never been to a Consumer Tribunal for any case; however, the module on Consumer Laws helped me learn a lot because it is very practical in nature.

The writing assignments prompt an extensive research in the respective areas and that is very helpful for someone like me who would eventually like to go into research. I hope the course continues to offer these benefits until the very end.

I would definitely recommend this course to lawyers, entrepreneurs, engineers and IT professionals who are dealing with intellectual property and cyber world.

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Anirban Ghosh, audit leader with Wipro, on why he enrolled for the NUJS MA in Business Law program

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IMG-20170114-WA0029Anirban Ghosh is an Audit Leader and head-Function at Wipro, reporting to the Global Chief Internal Auditor. He is a Chartered Certified Accountant (ACCA, from U.K.), a Certified Public Accountant (CPA, from U.S.), a Certified Fraud examiner, (ACFE, US), and a certified information systems Auditor (ISACA, US). He has over 15 years of work experience working with companies like Wipro, Cognizant and Ernst & Young with expertise in risk and compliance, anti-fraud controls and governance.

He is currently pursuing the NUJS MA in Business Laws course and over here he shares why he enrolled for the NUJS MA in Business Laws Program, in spite of having an enviable educational background and career. Over to Anirban:

Having spent many years evaluating finance and other business processes from a business risk, controls and compliance perspective, I aspire to eventually become a CFO someday, and given my international qualifications as the base, I wanted to strengthen my regulatory knowledge related to corporate laws in India and gain more knowledge about laws related to M&A, Private equity/ venture capital investments, Funding, Intellectual property etc. and legal expertise.

I am usually very active when it comes to looking for courses that upgrade my skills / technical knowledge and had earlier enrolled for a course from NLS, but found it to be too theoretical and the content was only available in the form of textbooks.  That is when I started looking for a course, that was more practical and found this course while searching online.  I enrolled for the initial 5-day course and found it to be really good.  I decided to enroll for the course because it is affiliated with NUJS. Also, the course was available online and content includes webinars.

The NUJS MA in Business Laws course has given me a good overview so far of the legal framework in India with lots of practical insights such as how to start a company, key considerations in contract drafting, dispute redressal, litigation strategy etc. all of which are quite relevant for the formation and running of a business. In addition to this, a great aspect of the course is the live webinars and recordings with industry experts that are available to all the students. This eliminates limitations of distance education that one might otherwise be worried about in other courses.

Another unique aspect is the writing assignments, which I think really opens up one’s ability to form an independent opinion and research skills, and helps build the ability to articulate one’s thoughts in a logical flow.

I have found the course to be very practical.  The content has been written in a very easy to understand language.  The content is also relevant to what I was looking for such as things related to startups like Founder’s Agreement etc.  These items are usually not included within regular courses that have a more theoretical orientation.

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Bhargav Thakkar; legal counsel at the corporate law wing of a Charted Accountancy firm, on how the NUJS MA in Business Laws program is helping him

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IMG-20170114-WA0038Bhargav Thakkar is an associate legal counsel at Dhiren Shah & Co; it’s a Chartered Accountancy firm with a Corporate Law wing. He handles Corporate Laws and primarily deals with clients from real estate industry. He is working under Mr. P.P. Rawat who is the ex-Official Liquidator of Gujarat.

He has done BBA from L.J Institute of Business Administration, LLB from Daulatbhai Trivedi Law College and LLM from Sir L. A. Shah Law College.

He is currently pursuing the NUJS MA in Business Laws program and over here he shares, why he chose to do the NUJS MA in Business Laws program in spite of masters degree in law. Over to Bhargav:

I got to know about this course from my friends, one of my friends suggested this course from NUJS. On further research, I liked the course. What I liked about this course the most is that it offers specializations, whereas courses from other institutes are generic in nature.

NUJS is one of the top three law schools in our country and the fact that this course is being offered by NUJS was in a way an assurance that it would be one of the best courses available.

I’m currently pursuing the course and so far my experience with the course has been good, the assignments are really practical. The activities are designed in such a manner that we apply our knowledge in a practical sense.

As I am already an advocate, I believe that a specialization would help boost my knowledge and my career prospects.

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Meenal Nasa, in-house corporate counsel at a global services company, on how the NUJS MA in Business Laws program is benefiting her

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IMG-20170114-WA0037 (2)Meenal Nasa has done BA (Hons.) in History from Hindu College, Delhi University, and LLB from faculty of Law, Delhi University.  She is working as an in-house corporate counsel at Quattro; which is a global services company offering business and knowledge processing services to organizations seeking higher operational effectiveness, greater flexibility, and lower operating costs. Prior to this, she has worked with prestigious organizations like Ernst and Young, Barclays etc.

She is currently pursuing the NUJS MA in Business Laws course over here she shares why she enrolled for the NUJS MA in Business Laws Program and how it is helping her. Over to Meenal:

I came to know about this course through the internet, on further research I liked the course structure and syllabus.  I first enrolled for the free 5-day trial course and I really liked the content of that course and decided to enroll for the NUJS MA in Business Laws program. I have about six years of post-qualification experience and I found the course content to be very relevant and practical.  Usually, the courses are very theoretical and don’t teach you practical aspects. However, this course laid emphasis on the practical aspects of Law.

The course content is really interesting to read, it matches with the real-world scenarios and you can relate it to your work.  This makes it very handy and useful. I’m able to apply the learnings from the course at my work.

I have chosen Mergers & Acquisitions as my specialization.  I want to be aware of all aspects of business laws.  Mergers & Acquisitions is one area where I wanted to gain more knowledge and I believe that this course will help me strengthen my knowledge and expand my skill set.

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All About Benami Properties And Recent Legal Developments

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In this blog post, Rishabh, a student of Guru Gobind Singh Indraprastha University, New Delhi and pursuing the Company Secretary Course by ICSI, analyses the concept of Benami Properties. The author discusses recent legal developments concerning benami properties. 

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All You Need To Know About Funding Of Political Parties In India

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political parties

In this blog post, Rishabh, a student of Guru Gobind Singh Indraprastha University, New Delhi and pursuing the Company Secretary Course by ICSI, discusses funding of political parties in India.  

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How To Get Free Legal Advice And Free Legal Aid In India

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Law of Injunction

In this blog post, Rishabh, a student of Guru Gobind Singh Indraprastha University, New Delhi and pursuing the Company Secretary Course by ICSI, describes the process of getting free legal advice and free legal aid in India. The author takes into account several constitutional legislations that provide free legal aid to the marginalised sectors of Indian society. 

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A BRIEF OVERVIEW ON BREACH OF CONTRACT

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Breach of contract

This article on breach of contract is written by Noel Satish Konwar, aspiring litigator and a student pursuing Diploma in Entrepreneurship Administration and Business Laws from NUJS in Kolkata.

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