When I first saw the LIE 2025 syllabus, I laughed. Not the happy, “this will be fun” kind of laugh—the nervous, slightly panicked laugh of someone staring at what looked like the Encyclopedia of Law stacked on my desk. Every subject, every case law, every amendment… it felt like standing at the bottom of Mount Everest in flip-flops.
But here’s the twist: I didn’t have the luxury of time. I had four months, a full-time internship, and an attention span that occasionally took coffee breaks without me. So I needed a plan—fast.
I started by tearing the syllabus apart (metaphorically). I made three piles:
- The Big Guns– high-weightage topics that appear every year.
- The Essentials– topics that support the big guns.
- The Nice-to-Have– things that might get one or two questions.
Then I built a reverse calendar—starting from exam day and working backward. Each week had its own “mini Everest” to climb, and Sundays became sacred revision days. I told myself: “If you can explain it to a friend without notes, you own it.” That became my golden rule.
But the real breakthrough? Mock tests from Day 1. Not after “I finish the syllabus,” but from the very beginning. My first few scores were embarrassing enough to make me consider witness protection, but each test made my weak areas painfully clear—and pain is a great teacher.
By the final month, I had touched every single topic. Twice. And on exam day, I didn’t just survive—I walked in with the quiet confidence of someone who had done the work.
If you’re staring at the LIE 2025 syllabus right now and feeling like it’s impossible, remember this: It’s not about studying everything at once—it’s about building momentum every single day. Break it, plan it, test it, repeat. And before you know it, you’ll be standing at your own summit, looking back at the mountain you once thought was too high.
💡 And if you want to skip the guesswork and get a proven roadmap, join the Sure Shot IP Program—because success is easier when you have the map in hand.
2 Comments
My last attempt was on 11 August 2025, in which I scored 58.25 marks. I find it difficult to cross the 55–60 marks range, and it is not possible to read all the allied laws in detail. I want tips to score above 60 marks. I have already attended all the old recorded modules except the Allied Law module.
My last attempt was in June 2025 and scored 55%.
An exasperating gap of 5marks making it ZERO all your efforts.
I do not want this gap.I will try and score70% so that it is for sure.