A practical roadmap for CLAT selected students to prepare for law school before classes begin.
- Introduction
- Understand What Law School Actually Looks Like
- Do Not Start “Studying Law” Aggressively
- Start Reading to Build Legal Thinking
- Improve Communication Skills
- Learn Basic Legal Research Skills
- Build Writing Habits Early
- Learn Essential Digital Skills
- Prepare a Simple Law School Setup
- Speak to Seniors — But Wisely
- Build Healthy Discipline Before College
- Explore Career Paths Without Pressure
- Things You Should Avoid During This Break
- A Practical Weekly Routine for the CLAT Break
- Final Advice
Introduction
If your CLAT is done, allotment lists are out, and you already know your NLU, this period before college starts is one of the most valuable phases of your journey. Many students either waste this time completely or start studying heavy law books unnecessarily. Neither extreme helps.
This break should be used to build habits, confidence, awareness, and systems that make your transition into law school smoother. The goal is not to become a lawyer before college starts but to become prepared for legal education.
Understand What Law School Actually Looks Like
Before buying books or trying to study complicated legal concepts, understand how law school functions.
Try to understand:
| Area | What You Should Know |
|---|---|
| Academics | Semester system, assignments, projects, presentations |
| Societies & Committees | Mooting, ADR, legal aid, debating, research |
| Internships | Why seniors begin early and how internships work |
| Grading System | CGPA, internals, viva, project submissions |
| Hostel & Campus Life | Daily routine, expectations, social environment |
This helps reduce anxiety and unrealistic expectations.
Do Not Start “Studying Law” Aggressively
A common mistake among selected students is beginning heavy legal studies immediately.
Avoid:
- memorising Bare Acts
- trying to finish constitutional law books
- reading advanced legal commentaries
- watching endless legal jargon videos
Instead, focus on developing legal curiosity.
A better approach is:
| Focus Area | Suggested Approach |
|---|---|
| Legal awareness | Read introductory legal content |
| Constitution and society | Understand institutions and governance |
| Critical thinking | Read opinion-based material |
| Communication | Improve reading and writing habits |
Law school will teach law. Your job now is to prepare your mindset.
Start Reading to Build Legal Thinking
Reading before law school helps tremendously, but your reading should remain beginner-friendly.
Suggested categories:
| Category | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Law school guidance books | Understand legal education |
| Indian politics and society | Improve constitutional awareness |
| Legal biographies | Learn legal culture |
| Ethics and governance | Build analytical thinking |
| Good fiction/non-fiction | Improve language and comprehension |
A simple habit works best:
30–45 minutes of reading daily
Consistency matters more than volume.
Improve Communication Skills
Law school rewards expression.
Students who communicate clearly often perform better in:
- presentations
- viva voce
- moots
- internships
- debates
- interviews
Focus on:
| Skill | Practical Method |
|---|---|
| English comprehension | Read newspapers or articles daily |
| Vocabulary | Note unfamiliar words |
| Speaking confidence | Discuss ideas aloud |
| Writing clarity | Maintain a short journal |
You do not need perfect English. You need clarity and confidence.
Learn Basic Legal Research Skills
You do not need advanced legal research before first year, but basic familiarity helps.
Learn:
| Skill | Why Useful |
|---|---|
| Case reading | Helps in assignments and moots |
| Judgment summaries | Improves legal analysis |
| Citation basics | Useful for projects |
| Legal databases | Makes research faster |
A practical exercise:
Read one simple judgment every week and summarize it in your own words.
Build Writing Habits Early
Law school involves constant writing.
You may eventually write:
- project papers
- case comments
- memorials
- internship research notes
- blog articles
- applications and representations
Start small.
Weekly target:
Write 300–500 words on any legal, political, or social issue.
This habit compounds over time.
Learn Essential Digital Skills
Modern legal education is highly digital.
Every student should become comfortable with:
| Tool | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| MS Word / Google Docs | Drafting assignments |
| PDF annotation apps | Reading judgments |
| Google Drive | Document storage |
| Spreadsheet basics | Organising research |
| Professional email writing | Internship applications |
Simple digital efficiency saves enormous time later.
Prepare a Simple Law School Setup
Avoid overspending.
Start with essentials.
| Item | Priority |
|---|---|
| Laptop | High |
| Backpack | High |
| Notebook system | High |
| Professional email ID | High |
| Folder system | Medium |
| Basic formal clothing | Medium |
Avoid buying expensive legal books before college.
Your professors and seniors will guide you later.
Speak to Seniors — But Wisely
Talking to seniors helps, but do not blindly follow every opinion.
Ask useful questions.
| Topic | Questions to Ask |
|---|---|
| Academics | Which subjects require extra effort? |
| Hostel life | What essentials should I carry? |
| Committees | Which ones are beginner-friendly? |
| Internships | When should I realistically start? |
| College culture | What mistakes should freshers avoid? |
Different seniors have different experiences.
Take guidance, not pressure.
Build Healthy Discipline Before College
Law school becomes hectic quickly.
Use this period to build routines.
Recommended habits:
| Habit | Why It Helps |
|---|---|
| Fixed sleep schedule | Better productivity |
| Daily reading | Academic consistency |
| Exercise | Stress management |
| Time management | Handling deadlines |
| Screen-time discipline | Better focus |
Discipline matters more than motivation.
Explore Career Paths Without Pressure
You do not need to decide your legal career now.
Just understand broad possibilities.
| Field | What It Involves |
|---|---|
| Litigation | Court practice and advocacy |
| Corporate law | Companies, contracts, compliance |
| Judiciary | Judicial service exams |
| ADR | Arbitration and mediation |
| Policy | Governance and public institutions |
| Legal tech | Technology + law |
Explore. Do not rush decisions.
Things You Should Avoid During This Break
Many students waste this period through avoidable mistakes.
| Mistake | Why Avoid It |
|---|---|
| Overstudying law early | Causes burnout |
| Buying too many books | Unnecessary expense |
| Comparing NLUs constantly | Creates insecurity |
| Panicking about internships | You have time |
| Ignoring hobbies | Creates imbalance |
Balance matters.
Also Read: Things Every Law Student Should Have in Law School
A Practical Weekly Routine for the CLAT Break
A balanced routine works better than overplanning.
| Activity | Weekly Goal |
|---|---|
| Reading | 4–5 days |
| Writing practice | 1–2 times |
| Communication improvement | Daily |
| Legal awareness | One judgment/article weekly |
| Exercise | 3–5 days |
| Relaxation and hobbies | Regular |
You are preparing for a five-year journey, not a one-week race.
Final Advice
This period is not about becoming academically ahead of everyone else.
It is about entering law school:
- more confident
- more disciplined
- more curious
- more organised
- less anxious
By the time your college opens in June or July, aim to be prepared—not overwhelmed.
CLAT gets you into an NLU. What you do after selection shapes what you become there.


