--- name: justinian-exam-time-management-coach description: Use when a student or bar candidate needs specific guidance on pacing, time allocation, and exam strategy for timed legal examinations — MBE, MEE, MPT, CRFPA note de synthèse, KSA bar, UAE bar, SQE1/SQE2, or Lebanese concours. Provides per-exam pacing rules, skip-and-return strategy, last-minute sweep checklist, anxiety management cues, and builds a personal pacing log over practice sessions. Covers all exam jurisdictions. license: MIT metadata: id: justinian.exam-time-management-coach category: justinian jurisdictions: [__multi__] priority: P2 intent: [education, time-management, exam-strategy, pacing, bar-prep] related: [justinian-curriculum-builder, justinian-bar-exam-prep-us-bar, justinian-bar-exam-prep-uk-sqe, justinian-bar-exam-prep-fr-crfpa, justinian-bar-exam-prep-ksa, justinian-bar-exam-prep-uae, justinian-bar-exam-prep-lb] source: Louis — HAQQ Legal AI (github.com/sboghossian/mini-claude-for-legal) version: "1.0" --- # Justinian — Exam Time Management Coach ## When to use this Invoke when a user says: - "I keep running out of time on [exam]" - "How should I pace myself for the MBE / MEE / CRFPA?" - "I freeze up mid-exam — what should I do?" - "How much time should I spend on each question?" - "I have 10 minutes left and 20 questions — what do I do?" This skill addresses the *process* of taking timed legal exams — not the substantive law. It pairs with [[justinian-curriculum-builder]] for the study plan and [[justinian-case-explainer-socratic]] for content. ## Per-exam pacing guide ### MBE (US Bar — 200 MCQs, 6 hours) | Phase | Allocation | Target per question | |---|---|---| | Morning session (100 questions) | 3 hours = 180 minutes | **1 min 48 sec** per question | | Afternoon session (100 questions) | 3 hours = 180 minutes | **1 min 48 sec** per question | **Pacing rules**: - Hard limit: do not spend more than 2 minutes 30 seconds on any single question - At the 90-minute mark in each session: you should be on question 50 (±3) - At the 150-minute mark: question 83 (±3) - Use all remaining time for flagged questions; never submit early **Skip-and-return strategy**: - If a question takes more than ~90 seconds with no clear answer: mark your best guess, flag it, move on - Return to flagged questions after completing all 100 — a later question sometimes unlocks a flagged one - On return: if your first instinct was strong, trust it; change only if you have a clear reason ### MEE (US Bar — 6 essays, 3 hours = 30 min each) | Phase | Time | Activity | |---|---|---| | Reading the prompt | 3–4 min | Identify issues; don't start writing yet | | Outlining | 3–4 min | Map your IRAC structure; bullet points only | | Writing | 20–22 min | Execute the outline; prioritize issues by weight | | Review | 2 min | Check for any missed issues; correct obvious errors | **Common pacing error**: spending 15+ minutes on issue 1 and rushing through issues 2 and 3. Graders award points per issue identified — a partial answer on 4 issues often beats a complete answer on 2 issues. ### MPT (US Bar — 2 tasks, 90 min each) | Phase | Time | Activity | |---|---|---| | Read the task memo | 5 min | Understand the output document required and the task constraints | | Skim the library | 10 min | Identify relevant authorities; mark key paragraphs | | Read the file | 10 min | Identify relevant facts; mark key items | | Draft outline | 10 min | Structure your output document | | Write | 50 min | Execute; use the library and file actively | | Review | 5 min | Check task compliance; ensure format matches the requested document | **Key rule**: the MPT tests document-drafting under time pressure. The first 25 minutes (reading + outlining) are just as important as the writing phase. ### CRFPA Note de Synthèse (France — 5 hours) | Phase | Time | Activity | |---|---|---| | Read through the dossier | 45–60 min | Read all documents; annotate; identify the common theme | | Develop the plan | 30–45 min | Two-part structure; test it against the dossier; don't start writing until the plan is solid | | Draft introduction | 15 min | Problem statement; plan announcement (annonce du plan) | | Draft Part I | 45–60 min | Two sub-parts; integrate document references | | Draft Part II | 45–60 min | Two sub-parts; integrate document references | | Draft conclusion | 10–15 min | Brief synthesis; no new ideas | | Review | 20–30 min | Check: are all documents represented? Is the plan balanced? Proofread | **The planning trap**: candidates who start writing without a solid plan spend 4 hours producing an unstructured synthesis. The 30–45 minutes spent on planning repays itself 3–4x in writing speed. ### SQE1 FLK (UK — ~180 MCQs, ~4 hours) | Target | Metric | |---|---| | Average per question | ~1 min 20 sec | | Hard limit per question | 90 seconds | | Checkpoint at 60 minutes | Should be on question ~45 | | Checkpoint at 2 hours | Should be on question ~90 | Strategy mirrors MBE: flag and skip; return at the end. Trust first instincts; change only with specific reason. ### KSA / UAE Bar (Arabic-language written exams) Arabic legal writing takes more time than English for most candidates. Adjust: - Read question in full before planning answer (Arabic legal grammar sometimes buries the precise issue) - Plan in Arabic bullet points before writing formal prose - For MCQs: translate ambiguous terms explicitly before applying the rule General pacing rule: similar to other bar exams — 1.5–2 minutes per MCQ; 25–30 minutes per essay question. ### Lebanese Concours (written + oral) **Written**: Standard IRAC essays; 20–25 minutes per question; use any remaining time to add statutory citations **Oral**: 3–5 minutes of preparation time is typically available; use it to structure your argument as: issue → rule (statute) → application → conclusion ## The last-15-minutes sweep For any MCQ-heavy exam: 1. Are all questions answered? (No blanks — there is no negative marking on most bar exams) 2. Revisit flagged questions: use the 15 minutes to resolve as many as possible 3. For unresolvable flags: use the elimination technique — eliminate clearly wrong answers, then pick between the remaining 2 4. Do not change answers that you are confident about; change only flagged answers where you've found new clarity ## Anxiety management **The breath reset**: if you feel panic rising mid-exam, stop for 15 seconds. Breathe in (4 seconds), hold (4), out (4). One cycle is sufficient to reset the cortisol response enough to continue. **The cognitive override**: "I know this material. I have prepared. This question is testing what I know." Say this as a deliberate override to the "I don't know this" catastrophizing spiral. **Physical preparation** (night before and morning of): - Sleep 7+ hours — memory consolidation depends on it - No all-night studying; cramming on exam eve degrades performance - Eat before the exam; hunger is a cognitive load - Bring permitted items (water, approved calculator if allowed); verify the exam's permitted items in advance ## Personal pacing log Over multiple practice sets, Justinian tracks: - Average time per question by subject (which subjects take you longer?) - Accuracy on first-attempt vs revisited questions (are your instincts reliable?) - Score trajectory per practice session - Pacing profile: are you consistently running out of time, or are you finishing with time to spare? Use the log to calibrate: if Contract questions take you 2+ minutes on average, dedicate an extra week to Contracts fluency. ## Related skills - [[justinian-curriculum-builder]] - [[justinian-bar-exam-prep-us-bar]] - [[justinian-bar-exam-prep-uk-sqe]] - [[justinian-bar-exam-prep-fr-crfpa]] - [[justinian-bar-exam-prep-ksa]] - [[justinian-bar-exam-prep-uae]] - [[justinian-bar-exam-prep-lb]]