Common Law Admission Test
Hello Aspirant,
CLAT is the National level Exam for the admission to five years Integrated law programme & Post Graduate law (LLM) programme. If you wish to apply for Post Graduate law LLM programme.
As per the eligibility, The candidates who are appearing in the qualifying exam in April/May (PG program) may also apply for the exam. You can check the further eligibility to go through with the given below link.
https://law.careers360.com/articles/clat-eligibility-criteria
Good Luck!
Though every student has its own unique way of studying for various entrances but some of the tips which are basic yet impactful are:
Know the CLAT paper pattern, marking scheme, changes in previous year, latest trends and participating colleges. It is not the quantity of books but the quality of books which matters. So make sure you have a selective yet good books with you.
Start with previous year CLAT question papers and previous year papers.
Be updated with General awareness, current affairs updates and even legal updates.
Work on your vocabulary. Read newspapers and relevant novels. This will also help you in increasing your speed.
Areas of Law to be understood in basic form includes: Law of Torts, Law of Contract, Constitutional Law, Criminal Law and some understanding of Family law.
Attempt online and offline mocks test. There are sectional and full length mocks available as well. Material you can refer to are: -Previous year question papers -Norman Lewis- Word Power Made easy -Verbal and Non Verbal Reasoning- By RS Agarwal -Universal guide to LLB Exam -Pearson GK Module -Monthly magazines on GK, Current Affair, Books and Novel
Hi there,
Amity Law School, Delhi is now not a part of GGSIPU, Delhi hence you will be taking admission in the private law course offered by Amity University and for the admission purposes it conducts its own entrance exam and it is not based on CLAT scores, you will need to give an English Language test, a subject based test and then an personal interview and based on the combined scores of these you will be offered admission. For more details please visit the given link, https://amity.edu/course-details.aspx?fd=FzNymoX3dH0=&cfn=twLXpHH9k4A=&CD=twLXpHH9k4A=
NLUI, Bhopal takes admission to its 5 year BA.LLB course on the basis of CLAT scores and it has its own seat matrix and seats reserved for students having domicile of Madhya Pradesh i.e. state domicile students.
To answer your question, as per the latest admission brochure which is uploaded by the university, it is offering a total of 07 seats out of a total of 122 seats in its BA.LLB course to MP State OBC students so it is not true that the university is not offering reservation to state domicile OBC students.
You can access the detailed brochure on the provided link for your reference, https://consortiumofnlus.ac.in/clat-2020/nlus/brochure/NLIU.pdf
State domicile is basically a proof of your residence , it verifies that you live in the given address.
So if you don't have state domicile then you can give voter id card, ration card, bank passbook , these also verifies your address , so you can try these also .
But before apploading you must check the guidelines of the form you are apploading the same for .
All the best. Thank you.
Hello nandini
You can get books like a gentleman in Moscow or talking to strangers.
These books are highly recommended books for CLAT students.
Best of luck
Jyoti, I believe you meant AILET when you say Silver exam. Also since you have tagged both CLAT and AILET, I would be answering with those two exams in mind.
So the answer is no, CLAT and AILET are two different exams although both are conducted for admissions in the law institutes of India.
While CLAT is an all India level exam conducted by the 21 NLUs or National Law Universities for more than 2400 seats, AILET is conducted only by NLU Delhi for around 73 seats in BA LLB and 20 seats in LLM. Also, CLAT score is accepted by many other private colleges also. That said, AILET is considered to be tougher than CLAT since the competition is also higher due less number of seats.
The good thing though is that there is no negative marking in AILET whereas 0.25 marks will be deducted for every wrong answer in CLAT. You can solve previous years' papers of both CLAT and AILET to get an idea of the types of questions asked and which suits you better. On the basis of that, you can select which exam you want to go with.
For more details on CLAT vs AILET, you can also visit: https://law.careers360.com/articles/clat-vs-ailet/amp
This is the enough time to be well prepared for the exam. You need to follow a proper startergy.
some of the tips which are basic yet impactful are:
Areas of Law to be understood in basic form includes: Law of Torts, Law of Contract, Constitutional Law, Criminal Law and some understanding of Family law. Attempt online and offline mocks test. There are sectional and full length mocks available as well.
Material you can refer to are: -Previous year question papers -Norman Lewis- Word Power Made easy -Verbal and Non Verbal Reasoning- By RS Agarwal -Universal guide to LLB Exam -Pearson GK Module -Monthly magazines on GK, Current Affair, Books and Novel.
hello ronik!
The first step towards the preparation is to identify the best book for best knowledge ,here are some list of book which you should prefer-
For more detail click here https://law.careers360.com/articles/best-books-for-clat
hope it will help!
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