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QLTS Course Packages QLTS School offers several packages for each of the two elements of the assessment, the MCT and OSCE. Our courses will dramatically increase your chances of completing the QLTS assessments successfully, and will move you one step closer to becoming a solicitor of England and Wales. Multiple Choice Test (MCT) – How. Login to UK Law School to access your QLTS preparation package and our online study materials, all on our customised Learning Management System (LMS). +44 (0)203 983 1333 / +44 (0)1725 514462 info@uklawschool.com. Suite 704 6 The Broadway Mill Hill London NW7 3LL UK T: +44 (0) 207 117 6077 F: +44 (0) 207 900 2935 Email: info@qlts.co.uk. Login to your account. Forgot your password? Aside from reading the QLTS School’s Taxation book for MCT, I also read the tax discussion in the book “Foundations for the LPC”, as well as the UK government’s website on taxes (https.

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Holly Gaskin-Old

President of QLTS Advantage
and Barrister-at-law

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Responding to numerous enquiries from students wishing to practice abroad, six NY law professors conceived and founded QLTT. Incorporated in August 2000, QLTT International has helped thousands of attorneys qualify as English Solicitors by passing the required official transfer exams for England and Wales. Our initial mandate was to create a course that would prepare students for today's changed legal environment and secondly, to establish a convenient and easy means for practitioners to obtain an English Solicitor's license without having to spend enormous amounts of time and money. Happily, we believe we've achieved both.

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Under the recent change to the regulations governing foreign admission as an English Solicitor we operated as QLTS International to continue offering our service to new delegates worldwide, and have since developed additional delivery platforms to prepare attorneys for the all-new QLTS format. The QLTS Advantage online learning system pairs our quality training materials with easy-to-use technology, making foreign attorneys better-equipped than ever to qualify as Solicitors and expand their business opportunities abroad.

Formerly partnered with BPP and OXILP (Oxford Brookes / Oxford University).

A lot of people asked me why I wanted to be qualified in England and Wales when I was already qualified in New York and Philippines. Sometimes I’d try to be witty and quote a famous mountaineer – “Because it’s there.” Halfway through the QLTS (when it was too late to back out), I read that the mountaineer who said that had died while climbing Mount Everest. The good news is that I passed the QLTS in one piece. Many people helped me along the way, and I thought I’d pay it forward by passing their advice along and adding some bits I learned.

1. Prep school? To pay or not to pay extra

I signed up with QLTS School (Basic Course) to prepare for the MCT. They ship you books to read and you can take mock multiple choice exams online. They also release bulletins on recent changes in the laws which may have taken effect after their books were printed. I found the experience somewhat like Barbri review for the NY bar – study all the books they give you and do as many of their mock exams, and you should be in pretty good shape. Was it worth the extra expense? For me, it was. It meant that I didn’t have to spend time researching which books to study, or cross-checking if a case mentioned in a book was still good law, which I think is especially important because the MCT tests you on the law as of the date of your assessment.

I also signed up with QLTS School (OSCE Basic) to prepare for the OSCE in November 2017. They will assign you a tutor who will work with you on the mock tests. However, they don’t provide you one complete package unlike for MCT, and you need to spend a fair amount of time compiling all the materials. You have to buy books from OUP, check the OUP website for supplementary materials and case studies, log on to your QLTS School account for updates and mock tests, and check your tutor’s emails for more mock tests. I did find the QLTS School’s legal skills video workshop extremely helpful and worth the extra cost. If you’ve been working as a lawyer for a few years, you probably don’t have to read the “Lawyers’ Skills” book from OUP if you watch the videos. I did not sign up for additional prep courses, nor did I look at past CILEX papers – I decided to focus on the materials from OUP and QLTS School.

2. Struggling with taxation /solicitors’ accounts / financial regulation

If you can’t seem to understand a subject even after reading the textbook three times, read another textbook to give you a fresh perspective. Aside from reading the QLTS School’s Taxation book for MCT, I also read the tax discussion in the book “Foundations for the LPC”, as well as the UK government’s website on taxes (https://www.gov.uk/browse/tax). Same as with some of the civil litigation discussion in the OUP book – I referred to discussions on the same topics in Thomson Reuters’ Practical Law.

3. How much time do you need?

Start as early as possible, but not so early that the principles (such as computing taxes!) that you had started studying would have changed by the time you take the test. I studied one month part-time (every weekend) and three weeks full-time for the MCT, and two months part-time and two weeks full-time for the OSCE. It is extremely helpful to have a few days before the exams doing nothing but taking mock tests and reading revision notes. If possible, use your vacation days and carry over un-used vacation days from the previous year.

4. How soon after the MCT should you take OSCE?

I took the MCT in February 2017 and learned that I passed before the end of the month. I had intended to take the June 2017 OSCE and was feeling pretty confident when I had finished reading the Probate and Property books by the end of March 2017. On a vacation to New Zealand in April 2017, I packed my Business Law and Civil Litigation OUP books so I could squeeze in some study time and … you can guess how many times I actually opened those books. On hindsight, I recommend not taking the OSCE immediately after the MCT because you’ll have just three months to study. Three months is not a lot of time if you’re working full-time – what if things suddenly get busy at work and you have to work on weekends? Someone advised to start studying for the OSCE immediately after taking the MCT even before getting the MCT results so you can take the OSCE as early as possible. Fair point- you want to make sure that the things you reviewed for the MCT are still fresh in your mind for the OSCE. Personally though, I think it’s a bit sad to start studying for the OSCE, only to find out later on that you actually have to study the MCT again.

5. E&W vs. Philippine vs. New York bar – which is hardest?

I’d say the QLTS is harder than the Philippine and NY bars because had to study for the QLTS part-time. Looking back, I think every Philippine law student has an advantage with the Philippine bar because we studied most of the subjects anyway in law school. With QLTS, there’s a whole lot of things to be studied for the first time by a foreign lawyer, especially those not from Europe (solicitors’ accounts, EU law, human rights law, etc.).

I also found OSCE more difficult compared to the essay parts of the NY bar. The OSCE will test you on your ability to identify, on the spot, any missing facts or documents that you should ask from a non-lawyer client (in addition to identifying the legal issues). In an essay question on the NY bar, you’ll be more or less supplied with the relevant facts so you can identify and discuss the legal issues. There’s also more memorization required in the OSCE – you must have mental checklists of questions for every type of probate or property interview, or you might forget to ask for the essential facts and documents (such as “Did the deceased have a will?”). You should also memorize the elements of each civil or criminal claim for the advocacy assessments.

6. Overseas Candidates – Where to live in London?

Try to stay in a comfortable place. It is bad enough to be fighting jet lag, having anxiety attacks and studying as many things as possible at the last minute – imagine if you had to experience all these in a cramped and noisy room for 11 days. I stayed in a nice serviced apartment in Pimlico along the Victoria Line. The Victoria line passes both Euston station (near the OSCE Part I venue) and Highbury & Islington station (near the OSCE Part II venue) so I did not have to change trains when traveling to the exam venues.

7. Prepare your war chest.

Taking the QLTS is not cheap. Exam fees, prep courses, books, and Lexis Nexis/Westlaw access, plus air tickets and lodging in London, can add up. Set aside money for expected expenses, plus a 20% buffer.

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8. #goals

Do not just aim to score above the pass mark. Aim to get as high a score as possible because pass marks and pass rates vary greatly. For example, for the November 2017 OSCE, the pass rate for the 14-16 November Part 1 cohort was 63% whereas the pass rate for the 24-26 November Part 1 cohort was just 51%. It’s true that you won’t get any prizes if you get a perfect score, but after all the effort, time and expense, isn’t it much better to score 20 points above the pass mark and feel bad about studying too much, than score 0.5 point below the pass mark and have to take the whole test again?

Finally, if you haven’t, join QLTS Study Group on LinkedIn. It is chock-full of great advice, especially if you are studying on your own. https://lawyerinconversion.wordpress.com/ is pretty useful too.

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Good luck!

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*All info above was based on my experience in the February 2017 MCT and November 2017 OSCE, the July 2012 NY bar and the 2006 Philippine bar. Test formats, etc. may have changed since then.