The G Summary Eqe Tools Of The Trade

Preparation -: the addition of 30 minutes to each Main Exam paper has moved things around (the A-paper starts 30 minutes earlier!) - Read through the rules regarding the conduct of the exam. See the warning about possible problems. - See about the location where you are taking the exam - Be well rested in the days before the exam - many D candidates sleep badly on the Monday night - Take a suitcase with wheels, and limit the books to ones you have used in the last 6 months of your preparation - After doing the papers of 2016, look at the to help with interpreting the EQE Compendium - source: - If necessary, look at for reducing anxiety at the exam - Be prepared to do the exams with a relatively small (possible as small as 60cm x 90cm) space.

Normally, you can place books you don't need under the table. - Look through the for other tips General - Photo identification (Passport or drivers license) - several black or blue pens (we hear that gel-pens are preferred, but they can run out quickly) - no electronic devices: only a wrist watch with an analogue display (and without any additional options) is allowed on your desk during the exam. See the warning about possible problems.

The G Summary Eqe Tools Clip. Trade fair had demonstration + test results + video; a lot of possible options to consider before you get to end - not possible. An update of the G Summary can be found here. Some minor additions and/or corrections were made and summaries of new decisions/ opinions were added.

- make arrangements to leave your phone & laptops at home or in your hotel or in a train station locker. See the warning about possible problems.

I often get asked about how best to prepare for Paper D. Ideally, you should start no later than September. Here is the minimum you should do before the exam. The main differences with Pre-Exam: • More subjects they can ask about • You have to decide based on the question which law to consider and which to apply (no possible answers are given) • You have to deal with DII (a very large, open question advising the client worth 60 marks) 1) Study DI methodology - 8 hours Learn how to efficiently answer = to get the most marks in time available.

• Ask someone else or get a book (see below). • Do the one-by-one (don't do Q.2 - law is obsolete) and really study them: what is being asked, how is it being asked, what should be in your answer. • Look in the Examiners Report for the minimum required (statements + legal basis) for full marks. • You get marks for giving an answer, and explaining how you got to the answer using the facts you have been given in the question. • Figure out if you missed a major issue or a minor issue - concentrate on learning lessons about major issues. • Study Candidates Solution for tips on writing your answer - the phrasing used, the detail level and organisation. Note that these are candidates getting almost full marks on each answer - you do not need to be at this level on all answers to pass.

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But you need to be able to get close to full marks on the legal subjects you know well. • You don't need to write full sentences - bulleted short statements are acceptable. • Note that the compendium is never updated, so some legal provisions may be out of date, and the fees will also be incorrect in many cases. 2) Learn core of legal subjects (EPC and PCT) - 60 hours Learn how the law fits around them, learn how to find things quickly in your legal book.

• Knowledge is tested by answering questions • Do the 150 selected questions from the (see page 9 of the Questions part). • Do most of them fully, but to save some time do some of them quickly by concentrating on the most relevant part of the answer. • For the modules with 1 or 2 questions, you can do them all. For the ones with 5 or more, just do every other one - you can go back and do the missed ones in a second run through. • Copy some of the answers as templates into your legal books.

• Do additional questions in important area where you may be weak (like PCT) (** 16 Oct 18: see below for updated comments about doing DII **) 3) Do some Daily Questions at lunch, in the train/bus, during a coffee break etc. - 20 hours • Sign up for the s from the EPO Academy - 60 questions in total • These cover the most important legal issues. • Study what is being asked, the facts given, the detail required in the answer and the legal basis. • If possible, discuss with colleagues 4) Fine tune answering DI questions and speed up - 20 hours • Do the DI questions from the. • Practice writing by hand on.

• The DI part is designed to be done in 2 hours, so log your time for each question. • Note legal subjects that come up often, like priority and European Entry.

• Look in the Examiners Report for the minimum required (statements + legal basis) for full marks. • You get marks for giving an answer, and explaining how you got to the answer using the facts you have been given in the question. • Figure out if you missed a major issue or a minor issue - concentrate on learning lessons about major issues. 5) Study DII methodology - 16 hours •, a basic methodology and how to customize it to make it most efficient for you • Do - this is a good balanced DII. • Study it in detail: what is being asked, how is it being asked, what should be in your answer.