For bar studiers, most of the focus naturally falls on content. They have to memorize rules, review outlines, and complete practice questions for more topics than they’ve been responsible for in the past. Studiers absolutely need to memorize and understand content, but the bar exam tests more than legal knowledge. It also tests endurance.
The bar exam requires sustained concentration, emotional regulation, physical stamina, and decision-making under prolonged stress. Bar takers may know the law well and still struggle because they have not trained to perform at a high level for hours at a time over multiple days.
Luckily, endurance can be taught, studiers who don’t understand the full picture of bar prep might assume that fatigue during bar prep and during the exam means they are doing something wrong. In reality, some fatigue is expected. The bar exam is cognitively demanding and focus naturally declines over time. As a result, stamina must be trained during bar prep.
Studiers should build endurance through gradual exposure to maintaining focus over time. Most people wouldn’t just wake up one morning and decide to run a marathon that same day. They train and build up mileage over months. The same is true for bar studiers. They should start with shorter, timed sets that increase in duration leading into the exam. Studiers must practice completing multiple tasks back-to-back and simulate half- and full-day testing blocks as the exam approaches. Just as physical endurance develops progressively, mental endurance improves through repeated, structured practice.
Additionally, studiers should train under realistic conditions to build endurance. Many bar studiers study in comfortable, often distraction-filled environments, that can create a false sense of readiness. Whenever possible, studiers should practice under conditions that resemble the actual exam, including studying at the same time the exam will be. The goal is to reduce the shock of the testing experience.
Another important skill is energy management. Success relates to how energy levels and health impact performance. Studiers should think about sleep consistency, nutrition, physical activity, and mental recovery as much as study time. Performance depends on physical and emotional regulation during the exam, as much as cognitive preparation.
Speaking of emotional regulation, almost every bar taker experiences moments during bar prep or the exam when they feel overwhelmed, discouraged, or mentally depleted. Many bar takers interpret this dip as a failure, instead of part of the process. Studiers should anticipate fatigue during study sessions and frustration after difficult question sets. It’s natural to feel anxious about the exam and experience emotional ups and downs during the study period. It can be incredibly valuable for bar takers to work with a mental health counselor while studying for the bar to help manage these ups and downs. Ultimately, studiers who can anticipate and plan for these moments are more likely to recover from them productively.
Ultimately, endurance isn’t built through marathon study days fueled by panic. Endurance and success are achieved through sustainable daily routines, consistent practice, and regular sleep and recovery. Bar takers won’t feel sharp and confident every moment of bar prep or during the entire exam, but that doesn’t mean they’ve failed. Successful bar takers are those who know how to work through fatigue during the exam because they’ve built their endurance during bar prep.
(Dayna Smith)
