The Student Room Group

Question to those who have completed the SQE2 in April 2022.

Hi,

Having completed the LPC and having worked for some time now, I'm planning to take the SQE 2 assessment in Oct - Nov of 2022 to qualify. I'm now wondering whether it's worth dishing out the money for a prep course, or whether reading ULaw's materials and practising with free online materials would be sufficient to pass. I have significant experience in advocacy, client interviewing and all the other written skills, but I'm not sure as to whether I would be at a disadvantage by not taking a prep course.

Also, does the SQE2 require any memorisation of statutory sections and cases, or are all relevant legal materials and principles (inclusive of Code of conduct sections) given in the tasks?

Any input from those who have completed this last seating would be very appreciated!

Cheers.
Reply 1
Hi



I am in the same boat! Did you get any further with finding the answer to this ? Thanks
Reply 2
Hi I am in the same boat as you but can't see anyone has actually responded! Did you get any further with finding an answer to your question? Thanks
Hi everyone, I did the SQE2 in April of this year. Whilst I wouldn't personally recommend the university I did mine with, I think doing the prep course is a must purely because the amount of work you have to cover and they're very good at teaching you what particular skills Kaplan/SRA are looking for in order to meet the criteria. There are some statutory sections and cases you will need to know and unfortunately the questions allude to the legal principle but they do not explicitly say so you need to immediately recognise it. Hope that helps.
I have taken SQE1 and 2. I did both prep courses with Barbri. SQE1 was brilliant with them. SQE2 was OK. I would go down a prep course route which will cover all you need. If not, look carefully at SEA SQE specification which tells you exactly what you need to learn.
(edited 1 year ago)
Reply 5
Hi everyone, I’m in a similar boat where I’ve done the LPC and have two years experience. I’m doing the SQE 2 in Oct/Nov. Planning to self study with UOL oral skills for lawyers book and written skills. I’d recommend these two books as they cover most of the stuff UOL do during their prep course. Please can someone provide some more info on how they found the SQE 2. Rough breakdown please of how the exams went. Has anyone done self study for SQE 2?
Reply 6
Original post by AshA124
Hi everyone, I’m in a similar boat where I’ve done the LPC and have two years experience. I’m doing the SQE 2 in Oct/Nov. Planning to self study with UOL oral skills for lawyers book and written skills. I’d recommend these two books as they cover most of the stuff UOL do during their prep course. Please can someone provide some more info on how they found the SQE 2. Rough breakdown please of how the exams went. Has anyone done self study for SQE 2?

Hi, did you get any responses on this?
Reply 7
Long answer, but I hope it helps any past and future SQE takers.
I did the SQE1 and SQE2 prep with Barbri. I also had a law degree. I would say that some kind of prep course is an absolute must, unless you can really find some resources that gives you a lot of practice and a lot of feedback.
SQE 2 specifically is composed of the orals (advocacy and interviewing) and written exams (case and matter analysis, legal drafting, legal; research, legal writing). The exams are generally quite hard, and everyone has found them nerve-racking. US solicitors have said that SQE2 it's worse than the bar. But don't let that scare you. With enough effort put in you can pass easily.
Starting with the written tests, are very diverse. They range from only needing to know basic law to requiring a pretty comprehensive understanding of the subjects, up to the smallest details, in order to be able to fully answer the questions. Case and Matter Analysis and Writing need teh most law knowledge. For research, arguably not much law is necessary, but you definitely need some practice with navigating through all the docs that might be offering and synthesising the information. Drafting, in most cases you just need to remember a few formulations and a few rules for board or shareholder resolutions for business for example. But just remember skills are important in all of these exams, so even if the subject is completely unknown to you, make the law up but respect the structure etc so at least you get some skills marks.
For orals, in advocacy for example, you absolutely must know the tests for a number of applications for dispute resolution or for criminal (max 10 each or so), such as application for costs, or application for bail, etc. These are things that they don't teach you in law school. In addition to knowing the test for these application, you must have the correct structure for your 15 min speech, and must be able use all/most of information that is given to you in the prep bundle, which can be quite a lot. You definitely need a lot of prep with advocacy, and you need to find someone with the necessary knowledge to listen to you and be able to give you the right feedback. A book will not give you that. You recording yourself will also not give you that.
Interviewing is arguably easier, however you really need to know the law to know what questions you need to ask, otherwise you'll run out of questions very easily. You are not tested on the law in interviewing, however you are tested on gathering all the right information from the client, so if you don't know the law you'll struggle with that also. And you also need the correct structure, to come off in a certain way etc.
I am happy to help with practicing any of the oral skills - advocacy or interviewing. I'll be listening to you and give feedback on how you've done and how you can improve, both the law and the skills part. I offer this as a service, so get in touch if interested.





(Original post by AB_2411)
Hi, did you get any responses on this?
Reply 8
Original post by Mhai
Long answer, but I hope it helps any past and future SQE takers.
I did the SQE1 and SQE2 prep with Barbri. I also had a law degree. I would say that some kind of prep course is an absolute must, unless you can really find some resources that gives you a lot of practice and a lot of feedback.
SQE 2 specifically is composed of the orals (advocacy and interviewing) and written exams (case and matter analysis, legal drafting, legal; research, legal writing). The exams are generally quite hard, and everyone has found them nerve-racking. US solicitors have said that SQE2 it's worse than the bar. But don't let that scare you. With enough effort put in you can pass easily.
Starting with the written tests, are very diverse. They range from only needing to know basic law to requiring a pretty comprehensive understanding of the subjects, up to the smallest details, in order to be able to fully answer the questions. Case and Matter Analysis and Writing need teh most law knowledge. For research, arguably not much law is necessary, but you definitely need some practice with navigating through all the docs that might be offering and synthesising the information. Drafting, in most cases you just need to remember a few formulations and a few rules for board or shareholder resolutions for business for example. But just remember skills are important in all of these exams, so even if the subject is completely unknown to you, make the law up but respect the structure etc so at least you get some skills marks.
For orals, in advocacy for example, you absolutely must know the tests for a number of applications for dispute resolution or for criminal (max 10 each or so), such as application for costs, or application for bail, etc. These are things that they don't teach you in law school. In addition to knowing the test for these application, you must have the correct structure for your 15 min speech, and must be able use all/most of information that is given to you in the prep bundle, which can be quite a lot. You definitely need a lot of prep with advocacy, and you need to find someone with the necessary knowledge to listen to you and be able to give you the right feedback. A book will not give you that. You recording yourself will also not give you that.
Interviewing is arguably easier, however you really need to know the law to know what questions you need to ask, otherwise you'll run out of questions very easily. You are not tested on the law in interviewing, however you are tested on gathering all the right information from the client, so if you don't know the law you'll struggle with that also. And you also need the correct structure, to come off in a certain way etc.
I am happy to help with practicing any of the oral skills - advocacy or interviewing. I'll be listening to you and give feedback on how you've done and how you can improve, both the law and the skills part. I offer this as a service, so get in touch if interested.





(Original post by AB_2411)


Worse than the bar, really? But the pass rate is higher than SQE 1.
Reply 9
Original post by AshA124
Hi everyone, I’m in a similar boat where I’ve done the LPC and have two years experience. I’m doing the SQE 2 in Oct/Nov. Planning to self study with UOL oral skills for lawyers book and written skills. I’d recommend these two books as they cover most of the stuff UOL do during their prep course. Please can someone provide some more info on how they found the SQE 2. Rough breakdown please of how the exams went. Has anyone done self study for SQE 2?

Hey Ash! I had a similar idea as you for the SQE2, really curious to know what you ended up doing and how it went?

Which UOL books would you say are required for the SQE2? I heard it's quite important to retain some of the SQE1 knowledge too.
Reply 10
Original post by Mhai
Long answer, but I hope it helps any past and future SQE takers.
I did the SQE1 and SQE2 prep with Barbri. I also had a law degree. I would say that some kind of prep course is an absolute must, unless you can really find some resources that gives you a lot of practice and a lot of feedback.
SQE 2 specifically is composed of the orals (advocacy and interviewing) and written exams (case and matter analysis, legal drafting, legal; research, legal writing). The exams are generally quite hard, and everyone has found them nerve-racking. US solicitors have said that SQE2 it's worse than the bar. But don't let that scare you. With enough effort put in you can pass easily.
Starting with the written tests, are very diverse. They range from only needing to know basic law to requiring a pretty comprehensive understanding of the subjects, up to the smallest details, in order to be able to fully answer the questions. Case and Matter Analysis and Writing need teh most law knowledge. For research, arguably not much law is necessary, but you definitely need some practice with navigating through all the docs that might be offering and synthesising the information. Drafting, in most cases you just need to remember a few formulations and a few rules for board or shareholder resolutions for business for example. But just remember skills are important in all of these exams, so even if the subject is completely unknown to you, make the law up but respect the structure etc so at least you get some skills marks.
For orals, in advocacy for example, you absolutely must know the tests for a number of applications for dispute resolution or for criminal (max 10 each or so), such as application for costs, or application for bail, etc. These are things that they don't teach you in law school. In addition to knowing the test for these application, you must have the correct structure for your 15 min speech, and must be able use all/most of information that is given to you in the prep bundle, which can be quite a lot. You definitely need a lot of prep with advocacy, and you need to find someone with the necessary knowledge to listen to you and be able to give you the right feedback. A book will not give you that. You recording yourself will also not give you that.
Interviewing is arguably easier, however you really need to know the law to know what questions you need to ask, otherwise you'll run out of questions very easily. You are not tested on the law in interviewing, however you are tested on gathering all the right information from the client, so if you don't know the law you'll struggle with that also. And you also need the correct structure, to come off in a certain way etc.
I am happy to help with practicing any of the oral skills - advocacy or interviewing. I'll be listening to you and give feedback on how you've done and how you can improve, both the law and the skills part. I offer this as a service, so get in touch if interested.





(Original post by AB_2411)

Hi, I'm going to be taking the SQE 2 in January and would be interested in your service for the oral skills if still available!
Original post by Romeo_80
Worse than the bar, really? But the pass rate is higher than SQE 1.

True, but to be eligible to take SQE2 you jus have passed SQE1. Therefore, it tracks that those who passed SQE1 are the most intelligent/prepared of the candidates and ergo the SQE2 pass rate is slightly higher than that of SQE1

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