Posted by Eugene Volokh:
Law Review Lara's Recommendations for Doing a Write-On Competition:

   If you're a first-year student who's planning to participate in a law
   review write-on competition (the sort that gives you an assignment to
   do over a week or two), start preparing several weeks beforehand. If
   your competition is in a couple of weeks, over Spring vacation, start
   now. If it's right after exams, in mid-May, start in early April.
   (Lara realizes she should have told the Spring vacation competitors
   about this a few weeks ago.)

   Yes, it�s extra work, at a time when you�re already swamped with work.
   But just as an athlete needs to prepare well before the competition,
   so do you. The write-on competition will require specialized
   cite-checking and writing knowledge that you probably haven�t fully
   learned. Use the time before you compete to acquire that knowledge.

   Here are the basic tips (borrowed from Academic Legal Writing (second
   edition), written by Lara's close personal friend):
    1. Many law reviews grade you in part on your knowledge of proper
       citation style. (Some have a separate citation formatting,
       proofreading, cite-checking, and editing test; many check the
       accuracy of your footnotes in your write-on paper.) Ask your law
       review which citation style manual it uses, and whether it has any
       supplemental instructions explaining how its style deviates from
       the standard manual. Read the citation style manual several times.
       Make it your bathroom, bus, or exercise bike reading.
       Mark (with post-its, for example) those items in the citation
       manual you found most surprising, and that you think you�ll most
       need to be reminded of during the competition. By reading and
       marking the manual, you'll (a) get a good sense of the rules; (b)
       understand the general logic behind the rules (not all the rules
       are explicable using a general logical principle, but some are);
       and (c) see enough citation examples that you might more easily
       notice when something departs from the citation rules. Pay
       particularly close attention to the rules related to (1) cases,
       (2) statutes and constitutions, (3) articles, (4) books, (5) short
       forms, and (6) citation signals.
    2. Ask your law review what style manual it uses, and read that, too,
       marking the surprising items.
    3. Read a good general writing manual, such as Strunk & White�s The
       Elements of Style, at least once.
    4. See whether past competitions are available. Read them, just to
       get a feel for what�s going on. If some model answers are
       available, pay particularly close attention to them.
    5. If the past competitions include practice editing and proofreading
       tests, do as many of the practice tests as you can; compare your
       results against the answer keys, if those are given. If there are
       no answer keys, compare your answers against those of some friends
       of yours who are also doing the practice competitions. (You can�t
       work together with people on the actual competition, but there�s
       no problem with cooperating on practice projects.)
    6. Go over any comments that you�ve gotten on your past written work,
       such as the papers in your first year legal writing course. Most
       writers make the same mistakes repeatedly. Figure out what your
       weaknesses are, so you can avoid them while doing the write-on.
       Your writing instructor will likely be happy to help you with
       this. Writing teachers like it when you come to them out of a
       sincere desire to improve your writing; and they often have
       specific advice that they�ll be glad to pass along.
    7. Plan ahead to make sure you have no other obligations during your
       write-on competition. If it�s during Spring vacation, try not to
       do your class outlines that week�do them before, or save them for
       later. If you�re working part-time, see if you can take the week
       off, and make up the lost time before or after. If you have
       children, do what you can to get the other parent or someone else
       to spend more time with them during the competition.
       Try to avoid leaving town to see friends or family, even if it is
       Spring vacation. You might intend to do lots of work when you�re
       on the trip, but it�s hard to work when you�re around people you
       haven�t seen in months, and who understandably want your company.
       Going out to dinner with friends is fine; everyone needs a study
       break. But try to avoid more demanding commitments.
       The writing competition requires you to do something that�s new to
       you, under considerable psychological pressure, in a limited time.
       You�ll want to finish your draft as early as possible, so you can
       edit it as many times as you can. You really might need most of
       your waking hours to do this. Even if you�ve found that the first
       year of law school hasn�t been as time-consuming as you were
       initially told, this week will be quite a burden.
       If, however, you can�t get out of your other obligations for the
       week, don�t use that as an excuse to just sit out the competition.
       It�s possible for you to do well even if you also have to travel,
       work, study, or mind the kids that week -- it�s just easier if you
       can focus solely on the competition.

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