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Learn 2 Learn: Mind for Law is a transformative four-module digital mini-course designed to empower law students with the cognitive tools and evidence-based strategies they need to thrive. Whether they’re preparing for their first semester or seeking to elevate their performance, this course helps students become better learners, master legal study techniques, and excel on exams.

Purchase Mind for Law

Why Choose Mind for Law?

Say goodbye to ineffective study habits

Embrace proven learning strategies that work.

Experience cognitive phenomena firsthand

Engage with brain games and simulated law school activities.

Unlock mental “cheat codes”

Boost memory, sharpen critical thinking, and increase test-taking speed.

Build lasting confidence

Rely on evidence-informed study practices to maximize academic results.

What Students Will Learn

To follow evidence when selecting study methods. random
To deconstruct and apply the IRAC method for legal analysis. random
To use case facts as powerful retrieval cues. random
Techniques to evaluate written legal arguments. random

Step into a smarter way to study law.

Learn 2 Learn: Mind for Law guides you to rethink how you absorb, retain, and apply knowledge. By practicing evidence-based strategies from day one, you’ll cut through ineffective habits and start studying with intention.

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Transform the way you think, not just what you know.

 With MFL, you’re not memorizing tricks—you’re rewiring how your brain approaches complex material. Each module blends engaging activities, real-world law school tasks, and science-backed insights that help you build lasting skills in reasoning, memory, and problem-solving.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the objectives of the program?

Upon successful completion of this program, students will be able to:

  • Identify the value of following evidence, rather than intuition, when selecting study practices for law school
  • Recognize benefits of knowledge in problem-solving: understanding via inference-making, speed via analogical transfer, critical thinking via working memory capacity
  • Spot characteristics of knowledge that yield problem-solving benefits: elaborative, contextualized, hierarchical, operative (ECHO)
  • Implement a law school outlining approach that creates requisite knowledge
  • Recognize the difficulty of knowing what you know
  • Comprehend the role of deep processing and retrieval practice in encoding
  • Comprehend the role of case facts as retrieval cues
  • Implement an approach to encoding outline using retrieval practice
  • Deconstruct IRAC process for legal analysis
  • Evaluate written legal analysis
What are the workload and expectations for this program?

MFL is an asynchronous and self-paced program that can take up to 16 hours to complete. You can complete this program on your own schedule and time (i.e. do it over a weekend, a week, or a month). You decide what suits you and your availability. All content and program activities are located in modules. The core curriculum is comprised of four modules. In each module, you begin with an overview, dive into several parts, then end with Dr. Meyer’s closing thoughts. Modules and parts will be locked until you complete the prior part. MFL is delivered on Aspen Courses.

Once inside the program, you a watch animated and instructional videos, participate in interactive games, and complete writing tasks and quizzes. Items are not graded, but scores and feedback are provided so you can get a sense of what is working and what needs improvement. There is a timed and graded final exam. Passing it will earn you a certificate.

Click here to see more information about the modules.

Who is the author?

Dr. Chance Meyer

After graduating from Tulane Law School (J.D., 2007) and serving as a law clerk to a federal district court judge, Dr. Meyer practiced for nearly a decade in the area of death penalty appeals, which lawyers have called “the brain surgery of our profession.” From state to federal jurisdictions, from trial to appellate courts, from witness testimony to oral arguments, from small-town venues to the Supreme Court of the United States, Dr. Meyer performed all aspects of criminal litigation while facing the highest possible stakes: life or death. He continues to serve occasionally as Special Counsel in death penalty matters.

Dr. Meyer’s legal scholarship, focusing on the Eighth Amendment and capital punishment, has been influential. His law review articles have been quoted by the Florida Supreme Court[2] and cited in Criminal Law hornbooks and treatises.

In 2016, Dr. Meyer became a full-time law professor. He has served on law faculties at several law schools teaching a variety of courses both doctrinal and skills-focused, such as Criminal Law and Legal Research & Writing. Dr. Meyer has designed and delivered the learning of law in classroom and asynchronous formats, online and in person, for large groups and small. Across contexts and scale, Dr. Meyer has helped thousands of low-performing learners reach success and high-performing learners reach even greater heights. He has also served in law school administrative roles, from Assistant Dean of Academic Success and Professionalism to Director of Online Programming.

While his work as a law professor was ongoing, Dr. Meyer earned a Doctor of Education degree from Vanderbilt University’s Peabody College of Education and Human Development (Ed.D., 2023). In this program, Dr. Meyer studied cognitive science, educational psychology, situated learning theory, educational data science, program evaluation, improvement science, and other disciplines. As a generalist bridging these fields, Dr. Meyer applies principles and tools from each to his work as a law school educator. He publishes on how these disciplines can be used to improve the effectiveness of law school programs. He has conducted grant-funded research applying cognitive and social psychology to legal education and has been retained by law schools as a consultant, helping improve organizational outcomes like bar exam performance.

Get Started Today!

Unlock the smarter way to learn

Ready to start a new way of learning? Click the button below to purchase Mind for Law!

Purchase Mind for Law
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