Property Law in New South Wales

Janice Gray, Heather J. Roberts, Neil Foster, Shaunnagh Dorsett

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Property Law in New South Wales

Janice Gray, Heather J. Roberts, Neil Foster, Shaunnagh Dorsett

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Property Law in New South Wales

Janice Gray, Heather J. Roberts, Neil Foster, Shaunnagh Dorsett

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Real Property

Moore, Geoffrey

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Property Law in New South Wales

Janice Gray, Heather J. Roberts, Neil Foster, Shaunnagh Dorsett

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Sale of Land

Diane Skapinker

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Pearson Law Briefs Property Law

Richardson

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Real Property Law

Samantha Hepburn

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Land Law

Peter Butt

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Property Law

Michael Stuckey, Gerard Charles Kelly

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HD flowcharts for Real Property

Flowcharts summarising Real Property topics for exam (concepts, cases and legislation): - Fixtures...

8 pages, 4000 words

70317: Real Property - Answering Final Exam Problem Questions

- A concise set of final exam notes. - Clear guide to answering problem questions. - Includes re...

33 pages, 13405 words

Step-by-step guidances for final exam

I created this note using different materials from lecture notes, textbooks, tutorial materials and...

37 pages, 15866 words

Real Property Scaffold Notes

everything you need - final exam notes! organised in scaffold answers to assist in answering probl...

16 pages, 7000 words

GO-TO Real Property Exam Scaffolds

These GO-TO Real Property Exam Scaffolds outline, step-by-step, how to approach a problem question f...

10 pages, 3444 words

HD Real Prop Exam Scaffolds

These are all you need to bring into the exam! A step by step scaffold to help you through any probl...

38 pages, 13213 words

HD Real Property Notes + Scaffolds (Optimised for Take Home Exams!)

Notes Optimised for exams and assessments! Bookmarks prepared and all links are embedded. Click t...

33 pages, 12426 words

REAL PROPERTY EXAM SCAFFOLDS

Real Property Final Exam Scaffolds. Covers three topics: 1. Forfeiture and termination of leases...

13 pages, 4728 words

Real Property Law Notes (Entire Course Summarised)

Concise summary of entire course content. Includes a table of contents to easily find topics in the...

87 pages, 27752 words

Real Property Notes DISTINCTION plus exam flowcharts and Cases

Real Property Exam Notes from Examinable Subjects DISTINCTION mark these notes were built from th...

57 pages, 23091 words

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Reviews

Possibly one of the most ridiculous subjects I have seen to date. The weekly 600 word essays branded as “weekly activities” are extensive and do not actually help when u want to learn the content. I suggest enrolling in online classes for this unit because being on campus Is useless. The tutors make the students discuss the topic for a good 30mins to 1 hour which is again ridiculous because no one actually knows the answer to be able to help someone else. You’re kind of just given 60 pages of weekly readings and 2.5-3 hour recorded lectures that would cure any insomniac’s sleeping problems they’re that dry and boring and make absolutely no sense. The marking of the 600 word essays is disgusting, one small error and they’ll give you a 0. The weekly lectures can easily total up to a good 4-4.5 hours worth of just lectures excluding any readings. You’re given the material & unreasonable workload where absolutely nothing is explained & you’re expected to just fend for yourself. I’m not surprised that the exam is worth 60% and that this unit supposedly has the “highest fail rate” according to the UPASS tutors. Keep in mind, the same tutors who laugh when reading the lecture slides because they make no sense.

Anonymous, Autumn session, 2023

horribly structured unit, hard exam and hard tutorials, I just passed with a lot of work done

Anonymous, Autumn session, 2021

VERY DIFFICULT SUBJECT. VERY HARSH MARKERS. YOU MUST BE ON TOP OF YOUR GAME. DON'T MISS ANY TUTORIALS. DON'T MISS ANY SUBMISSIONS OR LECTURES. READ YOUR TEXTBOOK NOTES. DO PRACTICE PROBLEM QUESTIONS. HARDEST SUBJECT YET.

Anonymous, Semester 2, 2018

What a joke of a subject. Very clearly a money making scheme with a ridiculously high fail rate with a purposeful reason. Coordinator clearly an egomaniac who wants to feel more intelligent by being unempathetically harsh in marking. The course content should not be any more difficult than Constitutional or Administrative law, and yet more students are failing due to the poor structure and teaching in this subject. Lecture slides are overly abbreviated to the point where they're unreadable. Such a big emphasis on purchasing the coordinator's book to generate further income for herself (very inappropriate). Told "you will not pass" unless you refer to her text. She also goes to the length of figuring out who has and has not purchased her text by using a question from her text book in the exam. Don't bother expressing your concerns to other faculty staff, as they will defend Professor Dorsett's poor teaching 'ethic'. Also, don't bother scheduling an appointment to meet and discuss any marks u are concerned with, as this will be held against you and I can guarantee your marks will drop even further. Professor Dorsett also hints that students who contest marks are worse off. Extremely communist in the way this subject is taught. If possible - I advised future students too look into cross-faculty studying. Do not give this subject your money if you can avoid it, as I guarantee 80% of students will be forced to re-do it unjustly.

Anonymous, Autumn session, 2018

Real Property was THE MOST stressful and THE MOST difficult subject I've done so far throughout my law degree. Firstly, the lecture slides are extremely difficult to comprehend so it is HIGHLY advised that you attend EVERY LECTURE IN PERSON. Your lecturer will explain everything in the lectures and you will 100% NOT PASS if you think you can just read through the lecture slides and get away with it. Secondly, you have weekly tutorial problem questions you have to complete. THIS IS MARKED EXTREMELY HARSHLY. One small error, and you'll be given a deduction. Make sure you do these tutorial problem questions COMPREHENSIVELY and to the best of your ability, because in the end, your marks will add up. It didn't help that my tutor was absolutely terrible and made no effort to ensure that we were on the right track. We literally spent 3/4 of our tutorial time "discussing" it amongst our tables, despite the fact that none of us knew the correct answer. This needs to be addressed ASAP because it was such a waste of time. Thirdly, the problem question assignment is marked VERY HARSHLY. Many of my friends in this subject received 50-60% for the assignment. Make sure you do this well by READING ALL THE CASES (not case summaries on the internet, but actually looking at the case and figuring out what the ratio is) and APPLYING IT to the assignment's facts. The final exam was difficult, but not too difficult, as by that time, I had understood how to answer the exam questions. This was greatly aided by reading the asterixed cases (the important ones) carefully. Turns out many of the asterixed cases were alluded to in the exam. The teachers in this subject are very harsh and precise, so it is strongly recommended you spend the most time on this subject for the semester. Also, using other people's notes WILL NOT HELP with this course, as often they do not explain how you are supposed to answer the question in assignment and exam conditions. Instead, go to your lectures, read the textbook and do practice questions.

Anonymous, Semester 1, 2018

I have a deep and humble respect for this subject. Make sure you ace the assignment and tutorials, as they’ll put you in good stead for the exam. I have to be honest though, although I passed, I still don’t know what an estate in fee simple is. Learn the basics and study on weekends. Read the textbook when you do your toilet rituals each morning. This course is no joke.

Anonymous, Spring session, 2017

A very technical subject but very structured. you cannot miss a lecture or tutorial. Marking in the assignment is very strict so you have to be very mindful of the language used by lecturer/tutor and incorporate it in your answers. I highly recommend buying at least decent notes here for guidance. (PS you dont need the expensive overly detailed ones that are just rehash of all the slides and textbook. just the condensed but comprehensive ones will do) They are helpful for exams as well so you will not cram in making notes.

Anonymous, Autumn session, 2017

Very clear and structured course, with laws that make sense and tutors/lecturers who are very helpful.

Anonymous, Spring session, 2016

Very harsh marking and onerous weekly submissions for 2 marks you have to write 200-2000 words whilst juggling 2-3 other Law subjects requirements plus lectures and tutes are spread across the whole week so you are attending 3-4 days for this one subject. Final exam was a very complex set of problems with multiple parts which should really be set as take-home assessments and not for 2-hours exam situation. Obvious the examiners and markers forget this is a Core low level undergrad subject for most students and not a PhD thesis with time on the students' plate. Even as a postgrad student, I struggled and I understand there was a very high fail rate. Maybe it's now just revenue-raising as it means those students have to re-enrol and pay the $3850-4500 for the same class again. What a rort!!

Anonymous, Autumn session, 2017

Harsh marking and complex assignment introduced at the beginning of the semester before you've had a chance to sink your teeth into the content. The only relief is that real property laws rarely change so old notes will suffice with bare minimum tweaks. Get into a good tutorial.

Anonymous, Autumn session, 2017