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FE1 Exam Thread (Read 1st post!) NOTE: YOU MAY SWAP EXAM GRIDS

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Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 238 ✭✭lawDani


    Lallers96 wrote: »
    Thanks guys for all the advice, I really appreciate it. It seems like the best course of action is to buy the manuals off someone else. Saves me a ton of money, thank you all!

    I'm assuming buying the most recent ones would be best? They seem to be priced at €50 each, does that sound right?
    That’s about right I think I paid 40 ish. Adverts have some and it would be good to get some sample answers to as mentioned above.

    The best course of study to take I find is condensed notes from manuals along with the sample answers .

    Welcome and good luck :)


  • Registered Users Posts: 93 ✭✭Townton


    Hello all. I have done 7 of the 8 exams. Deliberately haven't sat the last one because I don't want the time limit of your finishing point to when you enter blackhall to start counting down. Though there is a time limit that I havnt yet reached in which to sit the last exam. Reasons in a V good job atm in the UK good pay and very transferable. I missed the fe1 changes that came in recently and I am pretty ignorant of what that entails. Main question from the time I sitt the last exam how long does one now have to enter blackhall. It used to be five years but I had heard that has been increased to seven. If anyone with info on this could let me know for sure would be much appreciated


  • Registered Users Posts: 147 ✭✭Hamerzan Sickles


    Townton wrote: »
    Hello all. I have done 7 of the 8 exams. Deliberately haven't sat the last one because I don't want the time limit of your finishing point to when you enter blackhall to start counting down. Though there is a time limit that I havnt yet reached in which to sit the last exam. Reasons in a V good job atm in the UK good pay and very transferable. I missed the fe1 changes that came in recently and I am pretty ignorant of what that entails. Main question from the time I sitt the last exam how long does one now have to enter blackhall. It used to be five years but I had heard that has been increased to seven. If anyone with info on this could let me know for sure would be much appreciated

    Yeah, seven years. But don't trust the word of a random person on boards.ie, actually consult the law society website for peace of mind.


  • Registered Users Posts: 58 ✭✭scooby321


    I've been trying to contact the Law Society to no avail. Does anybody have any idea if the results for the exams that were sat will still be out the usual c.7 weeks from the last Friday or if they are also being postponed?


  • Registered Users Posts: 94 ✭✭mydogwentroof


    scooby321 wrote: »
    I've been trying to contact the Law Society to no avail. Does anybody have any idea if the results for the exams that were sat will still be out the usual c.7 weeks from the last Friday or if they are also being postponed?

    Hopefully the same as always - given that tort was called off perhaps earlier?


  • Registered Users Posts: 434 ✭✭rightytighty


    scooby321 wrote: »
    I've been trying to contact the Law Society to no avail. Does anybody have any idea if the results for the exams that were sat will still be out the usual c.7 weeks from the last Friday or if they are also being postponed?

    I’m expecting them to be the same tbh


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 184 ✭✭Breacnua


    Random Question:

    I signed up to a course today, the lecturer is chewing gum alot, pausing, blowing bubbles at times even, it is grating on me so much I don't know can I listen to the person.... am I just a moan bag or is it unprofessional ?

    Any opinions welcome

    Mod
    Sorry, such discussion of lecturers not for this forum.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 184 ✭✭Breacnua


    Breacnua wrote: »
    Random Question:

    I signed up to a course today, the lecturer is chewing gum alot, pausing, blowing bubbles at times even, it is grating on me so much I don't know can I listen to the person.... am I just a moan bag or is it unprofessional ?

    Any opinions welcome

    Mod
    Sorry, such discussion of lecturers not for this forum.
    Closed

    Ok I never identified person , college , even gender


  • Registered Users Posts: 233 ✭✭jewels652


    Breacnua wrote: »
    Ok I never identified person , college , even gender

    It is unprofessional iop


  • Registered Users Posts: 41 JCreaghy


    Looks like our resits won't be happening earlier than October. Junior Certificate cancelled and Leaving Certificate postponed until Late July/ early August.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 142 ✭✭HappyKitten62


    JCreaghy wrote: »
    Looks like our resits won't be happening earlier than October. Junior Certificate cancelled and Leaving Certificate postponed until Late July/ early August.

    I’d say they’ll happen same time as leaving cert. it will all be sorted.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 184 ✭✭Breacnua


    I’d say they’ll happen same time as leaving cert. it will all be sorted.

    I agree

    Will be on in August


  • Registered Users Posts: 178 ✭✭channing90


    Advice anyone:

    I have a 2;1 undergrad in law and I have 6 fe1s done to date and no traineeship, with this impending economic crisis and massive recession would I be better doing a masters in September or would I just try to get working anywhere at all even if it means for very low pay to get experience and take any job until this ends, don’t want to waste money doing a masters unless it’s really necessary and if anyone would recommend a masters, thanks in advance.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 30 lawstudentirl


    channing90 wrote: »
    Advice anyone:

    I have a 2;1 undergrad in law and I have 6 fe1s done to date and no traineeship, with this impending economic crisis and massive recession would I be better doing a masters in September or would I just try to get working anywhere at all even if it means for very low pay to get experience and take any job until this ends, don’t want to waste money doing a masters unless it’s really necessary and if anyone would recommend a masters, thanks in advance.

    I would say that you’re much better off getting experience. A masters is great if you’re interested in doing one, but in my experience firms don’t take much notice of whether you have one or not. Most trainees don’t.


  • Registered Users Posts: 41 JCreaghy


    channing90 wrote: »
    Advice anyone:

    I have a 2;1 undergrad in law and I have 6 fe1s done to date and no traineeship, with this impending economic crisis and massive recession would I be better doing a masters in September or would I just try to get working anywhere at all even if it means for very low pay to get experience and take any job until this ends, don’t want to waste money doing a masters unless it’s really necessary and if anyone would recommend a masters, thanks in advance.

    If you have 6 FE1s done, I personally think you should just finish them. I have a masters in IP and IT law. Once you have the masters done, if a specialised one, you may restrict yourself of future employment. That's what I did because I wanted my next job to relate to that particular area I studied because I just spent a year of your life and a lot of money studying for it.

    At the end of the day it's your decision, I personally wish I started the FE1s sooner instead of feeling like I'm having a quarter life crisis trying to finish exams and look for a training contract. At least when you finish your last two exams you can just apply everywhere. Best of luck anyway!


  • Registered Users Posts: 47 starfishxxo


    channing90 wrote: »
    Advice anyone:

    I have a 2;1 undergrad in law and I have 6 fe1s done to date and no traineeship, with this impending economic crisis and massive recession would I be better doing a masters in September or would I just try to get working anywhere at all even if it means for very low pay to get experience and take any job until this ends, don’t want to waste money doing a masters unless it’s really necessary and if anyone would recommend a masters, thanks in advance.

    If you're not currently working in a legal or career relevant position then, given a degree of uncertainty at the moment, perhaps no harm in applying to Masters programmes if that is something you're interested in. In my experience, fees aren't due until close to your start date so would keep your options open!


  • Registered Users Posts: 233 ✭✭jewels652


    I am in a similar position 6 fe1s passed and no traineeship my plan was to start applying after I sat my last two in March but with everything that’s going on I doubt firms will be taking new trainees for a while. This means that there is no chance of starting in Blackhall this September if I pass my last two. :(


  • Registered Users Posts: 178 ✭✭channing90


    jewels652 wrote: »
    I am in a similar position 6 fe1s passed and no traineeship my plan was to start applying after I sat my last two in March but with everything that’s going on I doubt firms will be taking new trainees for a while. This means that there is no chance of starting in Blackhall this September if I pass my last two. :(

    Yeah pretty much the same as you so, was going applying big time in the summer, all I am doing now is farming atm not relevant to the legal world, think I’ll just try to get working ASAP and go from there, what’s your plan now?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 83 ✭✭ahhhhhFE1s


    Ya look I am similar enough position, having sat 7 FE1s and no training contract, was aiming to get TC outside of Dublin in the next year and now laid off from my paralegal position.. Not ideal but think everyone is worried, TC or not, got to focus on that the economy will eventually bounce back and maybe just push out the time line in your head a bit more.

    In terms of masters, I would agree you'd be better off just taking any experience, have done a few unpaid internships myself so I would set the pay expectation low if you don't have much experience already, harsh but look it will be awhile yet before firms even contemplate taking someone on so just focus on figuring where you would like to work and try not worry would be my two cents.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 233 ✭✭jewels652


    channing90 wrote: »
    Yeah pretty much the same as you so, was going applying big time in the summer, all I am doing now is farming atm not relevant to the legal world, think I’ll just try to get working ASAP and go from there, what’s your plan now?

    I have no plan now. I don’t have a job and there is no point applying anywhere else I don’t think anyone is hiring unless you are a doctor or a nurse. I feel in limbo tbh :( I had a job in a law firm but I quit last year because I was doing a masters and sitting fe1s at the same time now I regret leaving the job.


  • Registered Users Posts: 94 ✭✭mydogwentroof


    channing90 wrote: »
    Yeah pretty much the same as you so, was going applying big time in the summer, all I am doing now is farming atm not relevant to the legal world, think I’ll just try to get working ASAP and go from there, what’s your plan now?

    Farming is important too.


  • Registered Users Posts: 101 ✭✭lawgrad49


    Hi All,

    New user so hoping someone could give me some advice and up to date info on FE1 process. Might be a lengthy post, so feel free to answer only one specific question if you want.

    I am an LLB graduate from Queen's University Belfast and as I want to train as a Solicitor in South of Ireland, I am planning on studying for my first every FE1's at the next available sitting (appreciate nothing confirmed because of Covid-19!). We have the institute exam up North, which is only one exam so the FE1's are completely new and daunting process looking in form the outside...

    In Northern Ireland we study very similar subjects (EU/Criminal/Contract/Tort/Property etc.) as part of our LLB but these modules have an NI/UK focus, so although I am not starting from scratch (as I would understand a lot of the legal principles) I will still need to learn a lot of new case Law and developments in Irish system post partition in 1922 etc.

    I've been reading through Law Society website and threads on here for a few weeks so I have managed to get a number of questions answered but some still remain. Firstly am I right in saying the following:

    1) You have to always sit at least 3 FE1 exams at a time. Even if you have passed 7/8, you would still need to do 3 exams in a sitting to get that 'last one'... for example you've failed Contract in 2 sittings but passed the other 7, in your third sitting you will have to do contract and two others of your choice (despite having already passed them).


    2) As a first timer, what combinations do people usually go with or advise? Appreciate this may be case specific but I would hope to go for 4 or 5 in first sitting.

    3) As a first timer, would be it wise or realistic and aim to sit 5? If you were to start studying well in advance, i.e 3/4 months out and balancing a full time job?

    4) Where do people generally start? I was thinking of printing out FE1 Syllabus from Law society website and making my way through each of the points under topics. Or would you advise going straight to someone for FE1 grinds/study notes and cut out unnecessary study if some topics rarely come up on exams?

    Any help at all would be greatly appreciated!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 30 lawstudentirl


    lawgrad49 wrote: »
    Hi All,

    New user so hoping someone could give me some advice and up to date info on FE1 process. Might be a lengthy post, so feel free to answer only one specific question if you want.

    I am an LLB graduate from Queen's University Belfast and as I want to train as a Solicitor in South of Ireland, I am planning on studying for my first every FE1's at the next available sitting (appreciate nothing confirmed because of Covid-19!). We have the institute exam up North, which is only one exam so the FE1's are completely new and daunting process looking in form the outside...

    In Northern Ireland we study very similar subjects (EU/Criminal/Contract/Tort/Property etc.) as part of our LLB but these modules have an NI/UK focus, so although I am not starting from scratch (as I would understand a lot of the legal principles) I will still need to learn a lot of new case Law and developments in Irish system post partition in 1922 etc.

    I've been reading through Law Society website and threads on here for a few weeks so I have managed to get a number of questions answered but some still remain. Firstly am I right in saying the following:

    1) You have to always sit at least 3 FE1 exams at a time. Even if you have passed 7/8, you would still need to do 3 exams in a sitting to get that 'last one'... for example you've failed Contract in 2 sittings but passed the other 7, in your third sitting you will have to do contract and two others of your choice (despite having already passed them).


    2) As a first timer, what combinations do people usually go with or advise? Appreciate this may be case specific but I would hope to go for 4 or 5 in first sitting.

    3) As a first timer, would be it wise or realistic and aim to sit 5? If you were to start studying well in advance, i.e 3/4 months out and balancing a full time job?

    4) Where do people generally start? I was thinking of printing out FE1 Syllabus from Law society website and making my way through each of the points under topics. Or would you advise going straight to someone for FE1 grinds/study notes and cut out unnecessary study if some topics rarely come up on exams?

    Any help at all would be greatly appreciated!

    Welcome to the world of Fe1s!

    1. No, you’ve picked that up wrong. In the past, you used to have to pass 3 exams together to be allowed to “bank” them, but once you had that “magic 3”, you could then sit as few as you wanted. So if you had 7 passed, you would just sit 1. Now, the “magic 3” rule has been abolished, so you can sit as few or as many as you want at all times. So, you could just sit 1 your first go if that’s what you wanted to do.

    2. I don’t think the combination is very important. Property is the shortest course so most people do that in their first go as it is considered to be the easiest. Property and Equity have some overlap so might be nice to do together. Constitutional and Tort are both really long, so it’s up to you whether you’d prefer to do them in different sittings or do them both your second go when you have a better hang of the system. I think the best way to decide your subjects is to consult the timetable (which isn’t out yet) and try avoid having too many in a row.

    3. You could do 5, but it would be really tough if you’re balancing a full time job right up until the exams start. There is hell of a lot of content to get through. I don’t know you and how efficient you are so it depends. Even people who aren’t working at all usually start 2 months before the exams when they are sitting 4, in my experience. Maybe sit down and cover one topic, see how long it takes you, and then gauge it from there.

    4. The syllabus is kind of useless because it’s only 1 page per subject. You would waste loads of time trying to make your own Fe1 notes from your college notes. You don’t need grinds but you definitely need Fe1 study notes. Grind schools sell courses and notes (including past papers) for extortionate prices, but lots people get these notes second hand, you can buy them online from someone who did the course.

    That’s my 2 cents anyway. You’ll get different advice from the next person probably!


  • Registered Users Posts: 101 ✭✭lawgrad49


    Thanks very much for that! Was a bit confused around the first question and how many you had to sit each time etc.


  • Registered Users Posts: 434 ✭✭rightytighty


    lawgrad49 wrote: »
    Hi All,

    New user so hoping someone could give me some advice and up to date info on FE1 process. Might be a lengthy post, so feel free to answer only one specific question if you want.

    I am an LLB graduate from Queen's University Belfast and as I want to train as a Solicitor in South of Ireland, I am planning on studying for my first every FE1's at the next available sitting (appreciate nothing confirmed because of Covid-19!). We have the institute exam up North, which is only one exam so the FE1's are completely new and daunting process looking in form the outside...

    In Northern Ireland we study very similar subjects (EU/Criminal/Contract/Tort/Property etc.) as part of our LLB but these modules have an NI/UK focus, so although I am not starting from scratch (as I would understand a lot of the legal principles) I will still need to learn a lot of new case Law and developments in Irish system post partition in 1922 etc.

    I've been reading through Law Society website and threads on here for a few weeks so I have managed to get a number of questions answered but some still remain. Firstly am I right in saying the following:

    1) You have to always sit at least 3 FE1 exams at a time. Even if you have passed 7/8, you would still need to do 3 exams in a sitting to get that 'last one'... for example you've failed Contract in 2 sittings but passed the other 7, in your third sitting you will have to do contract and two others of your choice (despite having already passed them).


    2) As a first timer, what combinations do people usually go with or advise? Appreciate this may be case specific but I would hope to go for 4 or 5 in first sitting.

    3) As a first timer, would be it wise or realistic and aim to sit 5? If you were to start studying well in advance, i.e 3/4 months out and balancing a full time job?

    4) Where do people generally start? I was thinking of printing out FE1 Syllabus from Law society website and making my way through each of the points under topics. Or would you advise going straight to someone for FE1 grinds/study notes and cut out unnecessary study if some topics rarely come up on exams?

    Any help at all would be greatly appreciated!

    I’ve seen most of your qs have been answered, but just on combinations. If you want to do 5 I’d recommend doing property, contract, criminal, equity, and then one of the big 3 (EU, Tort, Constitutional). Constitutional might be better left alone for the first sitting since it’ll all be new to you. EU and Tort you’ve probably covered already so a matter of preference. I’d say EU is the smaller of the two.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 101 ✭✭lawgrad49


    Hi rightytighty! Thanks for the info also!

    To be honest the idea to do 5 at first sitting was linked with my confusion over the “magic 3” rule. As I had thought (if the study was feasible) I'd be better of doing as much as possible in the first sitting.

    Thanks to lawstudentirl for clearing the rule up, knowing I can do as many subjects as I want in any sitting means I will probably just go with the combination of 4, Criminal, Contract Property & EU or Equity(if timetables make sense etc.) to start me off!


  • Registered Users Posts: 20 Rebelette288


    I thought I was seeing things about the magic 3 being abolished but I checked the paperwork again that I got re the March sittings and No I see it is right as of January 2020.

    Of course I am happy for the people that will be sitting these exams in the future that the process is a whole lot easier but I am also extremely annoyed that this wasn't done sooner (the magic 3 was in for years why all of a sudden did they change the rules now!)

    I like thousands of others had to resit exams that I had already passed and of course we still had to pay for them even though we had passed them in order to get the magic 3!And that was just the exams, we also had to fork out hundreds on accommodation in the Red Cow!I am hopefully nearing the end of the FE1 process now but given the current climate I realistically won't get a traineeship for ages now.So it is grating on my nerves a bit that I could very well have been in Blackhall Place and doing a traineeship all along and it is also grating on my nerves the amount of money that I forked out to the Law Society to sit exams that I had already passed.

    Again I am happy for the people who will be sitting these exams going forward but it is extremely unfair for those of us who it is too late for.Wonder will they give us a refund or a reduction on PPC fees when we eventually get a traineeship(not likely for a while yet) I doubt it somehow!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 30 lawstudentirl


    I thought I was seeing things about the magic 3 being abolished but I checked the paperwork again that I got re the March sittings and No I see it is right as of January 2020.

    Of course I am happy for the people that will be sitting these exams in the future that the process is a whole lot easier but I am also extremely annoyed that this wasn't done sooner (the magic 3 was in for years why all of a sudden did they change the rules now!)

    I like thousands of others had to resit exams that I had already passed and of course we still had to pay for them even though we had passed them in order to get the magic 3!And that was just the exams, we also had to fork out hundreds on accommodation in the Red Cow!I am hopefully nearing the end of the FE1 process now but given the current climate I realistically won't get a traineeship for ages now.So it is grating on my nerves a bit that I could very well have been in Blackhall Place and doing a traineeship all along and it is also grating on my nerves the amount of money that I forked out to the Law Society to sit exams that I had already passed.

    Again I am happy for the people who will be sitting these exams going forward but it is extremely unfair for those of us who it is too late for.Wonder will they give us a refund or a reduction on PPC fees when we eventually get a traineeship(not likely for a while yet) I doubt it somehow!

    This might not be relevant for you, but just thought I’d say in case you don’t know: you can now apply to the Law Society to carry over any passes you got before the magic 3 rule was abolished.


  • Registered Users Posts: 20 Rebelette288


    This might not be relevant for you, but just thought I’d say in case you don’t know: you can now apply to the Law Society to carry over any passes you got before the magic 3 rule was abolished.

    Thanks for that but yes unfortunately too late for me if it had been abolished even a year ago could have done that but Thanks anyways


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,270 ✭✭✭JCJCJC


    I thought I was seeing things about the magic 3 being abolished but I checked the paperwork again that I got re the March sittings and No I see it is right as of January 2020.

    Of course I am happy for the people that will be sitting these exams in the future that the process is a whole lot easier but I am also extremely annoyed that this wasn't done sooner (the magic 3 was in for years why all of a sudden did they change the rules now!)

    I like thousands of others had to resit exams that I had already passed and of course we still had to pay for them even though we had passed them in order to get the magic 3!And that was just the exams, we also had to fork out hundreds on accommodation in the Red Cow!I am hopefully nearing the end of the FE1 process now but given the current climate I realistically won't get a traineeship for ages now.So it is grating on my nerves a bit that I could very well have been in Blackhall Place and doing a traineeship all along and it is also grating on my nerves the amount of money that I forked out to the Law Society to sit exams that I had already passed.

    Again I am happy for the people who will be sitting these exams going forward but it is extremely unfair for those of us who it is too late for.Wonder will they give us a refund or a reduction on PPC fees when we eventually get a traineeship(not likely for a while yet) I doubt it somehow!


    Yes, it’s a bit easier than it was. The law school had to relax the rules because the number of trainees coming in was dropping sharply. I did it the old way, and had to re-sit two that I passed at the first attempt. Now that you can sit them as an undergrad, it’s a great opportunity - as soon as you have done FE1-relevant subjects in College, sit the exam the following autumn. Where you have elective choices in college, pick FE1 subjects, not wacky things. I’ve been in practise now for four years, but laid off due to Covid. The traineeship scene will be very difficult, whenever we re-open law firms will take a while to get fee income up and running again. Wills are busy right now, but they don’t generate the larger fees. Litigation is at a standstill, conveyancing also very uncertain. Without courts sitting, routine family law and insolvency are quiet. These are tough times, no precedent to guide us on when they will end.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 233 ✭✭jewels652


    Hi guys so I emailed the law society in relation to the exam results date. Here is the answer:

    “Please note the provisional release date was set for 1st May 2020 however this may change due to the ongoing health pandemic.”


  • Registered Users Posts: 434 ✭✭rightytighty


    jewels652 wrote: »
    Hi guys so I emailed the law society in relation to the exam results date. Here is the answer:

    “Please note the provisional release date was set for 1st May 2020 however this may change due to the ongoing health pandemic.”

    Thanks for this!


  • Registered Users Posts: 94 ✭✭mydogwentroof


    Do we think the dates for the additional sittings will be announced with the results for the previous sitting?


  • Registered Users Posts: 64 ✭✭CMUL


    When you log in to the law society do all your past results show up? i tried logging in there and go to the results and its saying logging access issue but it is saying im logged in but I cant see results from last October?


  • Registered Users Posts: 114 ✭✭lawgrad15


    CMUL wrote: »
    When you log in to the law society do all your past results show up? i tried logging in there and go to the results and its saying logging access issue but it is saying im logged in but I cant see results from last October?

    I checked my account recently and something like that came up. Mentioned that I had no recheck results. Nothing else came up. I was looking for the October results as well.


  • Registered Users Posts: 25 aideenc18


    CMUL wrote: »
    When you log in to the law society do all your past results show up? i tried logging in there and go to the results and its saying logging access issue but it is saying im logged in but I cant see results from last October?

    No they’ve never showed up for me after more than a week. You can email them and ask for them to send you them! I usually just take screenshots at the time and then have to go and source them afterwards.. not great!


  • Registered Users Posts: 21 Blue_pens17


    Has anyone heard more about the date for the additional sitting? I'm due to start BH in Sept and I need to pass Tort beforehand. Starting to freak out...


  • Registered Users Posts: 142 ✭✭HappyKitten62


    Has anyone heard more about the date for the additional sitting? I'm due to start BH in Sept and I need to pass Tort beforehand. Starting to freak out...

    I’m in the same boat.


  • Registered Users Posts: 480 ✭✭nmurphy1441


    Has anyone heard more about the date for the additional sitting? I'm due to start BH in Sept and I need to pass Tort beforehand. Starting to freak out...

    I would guess whenever the leaving certs are sitting, additional sittings will be then


  • Registered Users Posts: 238 ✭✭lawDani


    I would guess whenever the leaving certs are sitting, additional sittings will be then

    I’d imagine so too


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  • Registered Users Posts: 238 ✭✭lawDani


    Hi guys.
    Was it both Tort and Eu that were cancelled in the last sitting?


  • Registered Users Posts: 41 JCreaghy


    lawDani wrote: »
    Hi guys.
    Was it both Tort and Eu that were cancelled in the last sitting?

    Tort was postponed until further notice. For EU some people still sat it but anyone who was sitting either exam were given the option to sit or refund or defer to the next sitting.


  • Registered Users Posts: 589 ✭✭✭vid36


    I have a lot of sympathy for students stuck in limbo, but it is very possible the replacement sittings do not take place. Even with an easing of the current lockdown, there will still be restrictions on mass gatherings. Hundreds of students in both Dublin and Cork would seem to be, by definition a mass gathering.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 32 igobuy


    Just wondering has anyone received a refund for tort or EU exam from the law society? I know initial email said they would send them out. Thanks


  • Registered Users Posts: 142 ✭✭HappyKitten62


    vid36 wrote: »
    I have a lot of sympathy for students stuck in limbo, but it is very possible the replacement sittings do not take place. Even with an easing of the current lockdown, there will still be restrictions on mass gatherings. Hundreds of students in both Dublin and Cork would seem to be, by definition a mass gathering.

    It’s very possible to do it with smaller amounts of people. Spread out.

    I know you are sharing sympathy, but please this just adds to anxiety.


  • Registered Users Posts: 344 ✭✭spygirl


    igobuy wrote: »
    Just wondering has anyone received a refund for tort or EU exam from the law society? I know initial email said they would send them out. Thanks

    Not as of yet. I just assumed it would go towards the next sitting.


  • Registered Users Posts: 114 ✭✭lawgrad15


    It's really painful that we cannot do the final tort and EU papers online, especially those who agreed to sit the tort paper for definite. At the end of the day, the FE-1 exams are entrance exams to Blackhall. There are other university courses, especially in the remit of health science, whereby people are actually receiving professional accreditations and will have direct interaction with people but yet and still are being allowed to undertake exams in the comfort of their own homes. I have tort as my final FE-1 and it's not as if I'm going to be a qualified solicitor by the time I have it finished.

    The lack of information out there is nothing short of a disgrace. Students are in dire need of an update as to what is happening regarding the exams. Is the exam going to be sprung on us the day after the lockdown has cleared? It is terrible that people actually have to contact the Law Soc and then report back to Boards, even in relation to basic issues such as the above.

    In my case, I have made so many sacrifices to get this far. Between endless interviews to try and get a training contract sorted down to the sheer expense of the FE-1's, revision courses etc, it is proving to be such a difficult process and it's by no means a surprise that 93% of law students feel under serious stress, pressure and emotional upset from a recent Guardian article I read.


  • Registered Users Posts: 142 ✭✭HappyKitten62


    lawgrad15 wrote: »
    It's really painful that we cannot do the final tort and EU papers online, especially those who agreed to sit the tort paper for definite. At the end of the day, the FE-1 exams are entrance exams to Blackhall. There are other university courses, especially in the remit of health science, whereby people are actually receiving professional accreditations and will have direct interaction with people but yet and still are being allowed to undertake exams in the comfort of their own homes. I have tort as my final FE-1 and it's not as if I'm going to be a qualified solicitor by the time I have it finished.

    The lack of information out there is nothing short of a disgrace. Students are in dire need of an update as to what is happening regarding the exams. Is the exam going to be sprung on us the day after the lockdown has cleared? It is terrible that people actually have to contact the Law Soc and then report back to Boards, even in relation to basic issues such as the above.

    In my case, I have made so many sacrifices to get this far. Between endless interviews to try and get a training contract sorted down to the sheer expense of the FE-1's, revision courses etc, it is proving to be such a difficult process and it's by no means a surprise that 93% of law students feel under serious stress, pressure and emotional upset from a recent Guardian article I read.

    I 100000% agree. All we can do is wait - which I know is so hard. I really hope the Law Society are considering all their options. I emailed last week for an update and was told they ‘intend to hold the sittings as soon as the current health crisis permits.’

    I guess nobody knows anything at this point.


  • Registered Users Posts: 189 ✭✭neon123


    Hi folks, so I'm looking to do Company, Tort and EU in the next proper sitting (I know Tort and EU are due to held this summer but would prefer just to do all three in one sitting). I have a rough idea from previous threads of what to look at in EU, so just wondering what people who are studying/studied Tort & Company would consider key topics for these exams. Thanks:)


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  • Registered Users Posts: 238 ✭✭lawDani


    JCreaghy wrote: »
    Tort was postponed until further notice. For EU some people still sat it but anyone who was sitting either exam were given the option to sit or refund or defer to the next sitting.

    Thank you. So it will definitely be tort in the re sit anyway. Just want to be sure I’m not steadying time studying for an a exam won’t be held.. :/


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