After seven days of law school I, along with the majority of my classmates, are asking ourselves this question. We have already covered, in depth, 36 cases. For each of these we have to read, analyze, and brief each one before class. There is no slacking or 'I had a bad night', because the teachers call on random individuals in the class to give in depth analysis of the case. This is fine, except for the fact that we are all holding our breath until the teacher has called on someone. I swear you can literally hear the room exhale once a name has been called. Then, after the person gives the facts and analysis, the teacher starts throwing in 'what ifs' or questions that have no answer. It is nerve racking. The worst and best class is contracts. You know ahead of time that you will be called on, but the teacher is really abrasive. What ever you do, do NOT use pronouns like 'he', 'she', 'his', 'hers', and especially 'it'. Never say "I guess". Never begin a sentence with 'that'. These rules seem simple, but once you are put on the spot, they go out the window. When you are on the spot, you want to choke him, but when someone else is one the spot, he is hilarious. I just about busted a gut in class today after he made two men come to the front of the class that made the mistake of saying they were having a hard time hearing and making the man that was 'on the spot' move to the back because he was talking to quietly. On average there is about six hours of out of class work per day. I try to fit it into the time I have between classes, but that doesn't always work, so I end up trying to study while kids are running around, chasing each other and yelling at the top of their lungs (something they only do if they think I'm distracted). Then there is the fact that there are no quizzes or mid-terms or other tests to gauge your understanding and progress in the class. Just one huge four hour test at the end of the semester. There are no outlines or study materials to help you in knowing what to study. You just have to try to pull out the min concepts and ideas from the cases and hope you can apply them to hypotheticals, and hope you don't miss any important issues in the hypothetical that might need to be addressed. It is all a bit stressful.