Law study techniques that work with your brain, not against it. Designed specifically for neurodivergent law students — from case briefing to exam technique.
A case brief is a short, structured summary of a court case. It extracts the essential facts, legal issues, decision, and reasoning from a judgment — so you do not have to re-read the entire case every time you revise. For law students, case briefing is the single most important study skill.
Law cases can be 20, 50, even 100 pages long. For dyslexic learners, that volume of dense legal text is overwhelming. A case brief reduces it to half a page. For ADHD brains, the structured format gives you a clear task: find these five things and write them down. No ambiguity, no decision fatigue. For autistic learners, the consistent structure means every case brief follows the same predictable pattern.
IRAC stands for Issue, Rule, Application, Conclusion. It is the standard framework for answering law problem questions. Instead of writing a rambling essay, you follow four clear steps for every legal issue in the scenario. Tutors and examiners expect this structure.
Problem questions can feel overwhelming — there is a long scenario with multiple characters and events, and you need to find the law hiding inside. IRAC gives you a predictable structure every single time. For ADHD brains, it eliminates the paralysis of "where do I start?" — you always start with the Issue. For dyslexic learners, the four-step framework reduces the need to hold everything in working memory at once. For autistic learners, the systematic nature of IRAC provides the logical, rule-based process that feels natural.
A law essay question asks you to discuss, evaluate, or critically assess a legal proposition. Unlike problem questions (which use IRAC), essays require a clear argument supported by authorities. The structure is: Introduction, Main Body (themed paragraphs with authorities), and Conclusion. Every paragraph should advance your argument, not just describe the law.
Law essays can feel impossibly open-ended. Without a clear structure, ADHD brains freeze: where do you start when the question says "Critically evaluate"? This framework gives you a step-by-step blueprint. For dyslexic learners, planning the structure before writing means you can focus on one paragraph at a time instead of holding the entire essay in your head. For autistic learners, the systematic approach provides the predictable pattern that makes writing feel manageable.
Law degrees are reading-intensive. Every module has a textbook, a casebook, journal articles, and dozens of full judgments. You cannot read everything. The skill is knowing how to prioritise, skim strategically, and extract what you need without reading every word of every source.
For dyslexic learners, the sheer volume of reading in a law degree can feel impossible. Strategic reading means you read less but understand more. For ADHD brains, having a clear system prevents the overwhelm that leads to reading nothing at all. For autistic learners, the temptation to read everything perfectly is strong — this framework gives you permission to be selective and still succeed.
Law exams require you to cite case names from memory. You might need to remember 30 to 50 cases per module. Active recall means testing yourself on case names and their principles instead of just re-reading your notes. You close your notes and try to recall the case — then check what you got right and what you missed.
Re-reading case briefs feels productive but does not create strong memories. Active recall forces your brain to retrieve the information, which strengthens the memory each time. For ADHD brains, it is more engaging than passive reading — it feels like a challenge, not a chore. For dyslexic learners, using flashcards with short prompts reduces the reading burden. For autistic learners, the systematic approach (one card, one case, one principle) provides satisfying structure.
A legal mind map is a visual diagram that shows how legal concepts, cases, and statutes connect to each other. You put the main topic (e.g., "Negligence") in the centre and branch out with elements, defences, key cases, and remedies. It turns complex legal structures into a visual web you can see at a glance.
Law is full of interconnected concepts — duty of care leads to breach, which leads to causation, which leads to remoteness. A mind map shows these connections visually, which is far easier to process than pages of linear notes. For dyslexic learners, using colours and short keywords reduces the reading burden. For ADHD brains, the creative process of drawing and connecting keeps you engaged. For autistic learners, the structured visual format shows exactly how each piece fits into the whole topic.
A law note-taking system is a structured way to capture and organise legal information during lectures, tutorials, and independent reading. Law notes need to capture rules, authorities, and arguments — not just facts. The right system means your notes become your revision resource, not a disorganised mess you never look at again.
Unstructured law notes become impossible to revise from — you end up with pages of text but no way to find the case you need. For ADHD brains, a system means you spend less time deciding how to organise and more time actually learning. For dyslexic learners, using colour-coded sections and abbreviations reduces the text density. For autistic learners, the consistency of always using the same format reduces cognitive load.
Cornell Method for Law: Left column: legal questions and issue headings (e.g., "What is the test for duty of care?"). Right column: the rule, authority, and explanation. Bottom section: a one-sentence summary of the legal principle. When revising, cover the right column and test yourself using the questions.
Case Law Table: Create a table with columns for: Case Name, Year, Facts (2 sentences), Legal Issue, Ratio Decidendi, and Significance. Fill in one row per case. This builds your case law database as you study, and it is far easier to scan than linear notes.
Digital with Notion or OneNote: Create a page per topic (e.g., "Negligence — Duty of Care"). Use toggle blocks for each case. Add colour-coded tags for statutes (blue), cases (green), and academic opinions (purple). Link to BrainWave videos for visual revision. Searchable notes mean you never lose a case again.
A law revision plan is a structured timetable that spreads your revision across all your law modules in the weeks before exams. It tells you which topics to revise, which cases to drill, and when to practise past papers. A good plan prevents the panic of last-minute cramming and ensures you cover every examinable topic.
Without a plan, ADHD brains default to revising whichever module feels most interesting (or avoiding revision entirely). Autistic learners may over-focus on one area of law — spending three weeks on negligence while ignoring contract entirely. A revision plan removes the decision-making burden and reduces anxiety about whether you are doing enough. It makes the invisible concept of "enough revision" visible and measurable.
Every technique on this page has a dedicated BrainWave video with legal examples, demonstrations, and step-by-step walkthroughs. Watch at your own pace with accessible subtitles.
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