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Study Groups

Law school is a team sport. Share the work, multiply the output — without sacrificing the understanding you build when you do your own reading.

Share decks with classmates

Join your law school section or study group

Discover and rate top community decks

1

Creating a Study Group

Create a group for your section, your study team, or any subset of classmates. Set the group to Public (anyone at your school can join) or Private (invite-only).

Group members can see each other's shared decks and outlines, post messages, and access shared resources — all within JurisNote, no third-party chat app required.

Screenshot coming soon
2

Sharing Decks and Outlines

Any deck or outline can be shared with a group or made public to the entire community. Sharing is non-destructive — recipients get their own independent copy that they can edit, extend, and study from without affecting your version.

Shared decks show the original author's name. If someone spots an error or has a better formulation, they can suggest it back to you — keeping everyone's materials accurate.

Screenshot coming soon
3

The Public Library

JurisNote's public library is a searchable collection of decks and outlines shared by students across all law schools. Search for 'Civ Pro Personal Jurisdiction' or 'Torts Negligence' and find community-created materials to supplement your own.

High-quality resources rise to the top through upvotes. Use community materials as a starting point, not a substitute — the act of editing and personalizing them cements your understanding.

Screenshot coming soon
4

Dividing and Conquering

Study groups can split case assignments across members: each person briefs a set of cases, then shares their briefs with the group. Everyone imports the shared briefs into their own library and has complete coverage without doing every case from scratch.

This works best when each member actually reads their assigned cases — the briefs complement your reading, they don't replace it.

Screenshot coming soon

Ready to master Study Groups?

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