A preparation platform built just for you, Naaila — covering English, legal awareness, critical reasoning, essay writing, and Ghanaian current affairs with timed practice, model answers, and a structured study path. You've got this. ⚖
The Wisconsin Pre-LLB entrance assessment screens for the foundational habits of a future law student: precise language, structured argument, civic literacy, and the ability to reason under time pressure. While the exact paper varies year-to-year, private university LLB entrance exams in Ghana consistently probe a recognisable cluster of competencies.
You will not be examined on the law itself. You will be examined on whether you can read carefully, write clearly, argue logically, and engage thoughtfully with Ghana's constitutional and civic life. This platform trains all four.
An indicative breakdown of competencies private LLB entrance papers tend to emphasise:
Structured coverage of every domain the entrance exam touches — built from past-paper patterns and standard pre-law preparation curricula.
Sharpen grammar instinct, reading speed, and lexical precision — the bedrock of every comprehension and essay question.
Build working familiarity with the institutions, principles, and vocabulary that frame Ghanaian legal life.
Train the mental moves a law student makes daily: spotting assumptions, testing inferences, and seeing the shape of an argument.
Learn to plan, structure, and defend a position in clear, evidence-supported prose — the single highest-leverage skill on the paper.
Stay current on the people, policies, and institutions shaping Ghana — and on the regional context of ECOWAS and the African Union.
Forty-plus core terms you must be able to recognise, define, and apply. Tap any term to reveal its definition.
Fifty-plus questions across English, legal awareness, critical thinking, and Ghana current affairs — with explanations after every answer.
Six representative prompts — each with planning tips, a suggested structure, key arguments, and a sample outline.
Seven principles that separate prepared candidates from talented but disorganised ones.
Allocate per-section budgets before you start writing. A rough rule: spend no more than 60 seconds per MCQ on first pass, flag the rest, return at the end. For essays, reserve the final 5 minutes for re-reading.
Read the questions first. Then skim the passage for structure, then re-read for the specific answers. This single habit raises comprehension accuracy more than vocabulary practice.
Most MCQs have two obviously wrong options, one plausible distractor, and one correct answer. Eliminate first; you'll often arrive at the answer without needing to recognise it directly.
Spend the first three minutes of every essay on a written outline: thesis, three supporting points, two counter-arguments, conclusion. Never start writing without it — examiners can tell.
When you don't know the technical answer, reason from first principles: what does the rule of law require? What protects fairness? Constitutional intuitions usually point in the right direction.
Active recall beats re-reading. Test yourself on this platform's flashcards and quizzes daily for two weeks before the exam — spaced repetition is more efficient than long reading sessions.
Sleep before the exam matters more than a final cram session. Arrive 30 minutes early, breathe deeply, and treat the first question as a warm-up — not a verdict on your preparation.
Tap any card to flip it. Cover branches of government, constitutional principles, key institutions, and current ministers.
A timed 25-question simulation drawing from the full question bank. Instant scoring, performance breakdown, and feedback when you finish.
Random selection from all four categories. The timer starts when you click Begin. Skipped questions count as wrong.