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Mar 19, 2026 Barplan Faculty

A High-Scoring Answer Structure for Issue-Spotting Questions

Use this repeatable structure to identify major issues quickly, rank them by mark value, and write complete, coherent answers within time.

Issue spotting decides most marks

In scenario-based law questions, candidates often lose marks before writing their first full paragraph. They miss major issues, overstate minor ones, or mix legal tests. A strong structure solves this by forcing prioritization before prose.

The three-part script architecture

Part 1: Issue roadmap (short)

Start with a two- or three-line roadmap naming the key legal issues in order of likely mark weight. This signals control and helps the marker track your analysis.

Part 2: Ranked analysis blocks

Handle each issue in a separate block using weighted IRAC. Give most space to application. Use one authority cue where relevant and tie it to facts directly.

Part 3: Practical conclusion

End each major issue with an outcome statement: likely legal position, uncertainty points, and what fact would change the result. Practical conclusions score highly because they show legal judgment.

Ranking issues under time pressure

Use this quick test: if removed, would the answer lose substantial marks? If yes, it is a major issue. If not, keep it brief. This prevents ten-minute detours on peripheral points.

Paragraph formula you can train

Use one paragraph per function:

  • Issue sentence tied to facts
  • Rule sentence with legal test
  • Application sentences with fact-by-fact logic
  • Conclusion sentence with confidence level

Functional paragraphs reduce rambling and improve readability.

How to avoid over-writing

Set a per-issue timer before writing. If time expires, conclude and move. A complete script with balanced coverage almost always outperforms an incomplete script with one polished section.

Practice drill

Take one past scenario. Spend only 3 minutes creating an issue roadmap and ranking list. Then write one full analysis block in 8 minutes. Repeat with three different questions. This drill builds speed in planning, which is where most time is won.

Closing perspective

Issue-spotting excellence is a structural skill, not talent. Use a roadmap, ranked blocks, and practical conclusions consistently. When structure is stable, quality improves even under pressure.