[Superseded by later editions, also available on this website--to use with newest Fundamentals while studying for the state exam.] ...The Louisiana Notary Exam has a 20% pass rate. The Notary Exam has an official Study Guide you use during the exam. But the Study Guide has no index, no big picture, no study strategies, no exam-day tips, no paginated cross-references . . . and few of the forms notaries use that they test your understanding of. It's got the law and notary rules, but it's missing essentials for any such textbook.
This book has all thatand much more that anyone contemplating the Notary Exam should read. It even includes crucial information about notary practice that every newbie notary ought to know. Basically it's the rest of the official Study Guide they somehow omitted. Why would they leave out the index, of all things? Reminder: a 20% pass rate.
As a senior law teacher and member of two state bars, Professor Childress still needed to pass the Louisiana Notary Exam to start practicing as one. It's a challenging exam for everyone, yet he found in the 'Study Guide' lots of trees but little forestand even less real guidance. Determined that current test-takers can do better with more real help, he wrote this book and geared the page numbersincluding a detailed indexto the 2020 edition of the state's official text, Fundamentals of Louisiana Notarial Law and Practice. ... An affordable addition to the Self-Study Sherpa Series from Quid Pro Books.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Steven Alan Childress is a professor of law at Tulane, since 1988. He earned a JD from Harvard and a PhD from Berkeley. He clerked in Shreveport for the federal court and practiced law in California. He is a practicing Louisiana notary public and a member of the Louisiana Notary Association. He is the co-author of the legal treatise 'Federal Standards of Review,' edited two volumes on legal ethics, and annotated a modern edition of Oliver Wendell Holmes' 'The Common Law.'
This book has all thatand much more that anyone contemplating the Notary Exam should read. It even includes crucial information about notary practice that every newbie notary ought to know. Basically it's the rest of the official Study Guide they somehow omitted. Why would they leave out the index, of all things? Reminder: a 20% pass rate.
As a senior law teacher and member of two state bars, Professor Childress still needed to pass the Louisiana Notary Exam to start practicing as one. It's a challenging exam for everyone, yet he found in the 'Study Guide' lots of trees but little forestand even less real guidance. Determined that current test-takers can do better with more real help, he wrote this book and geared the page numbersincluding a detailed indexto the 2020 edition of the state's official text, Fundamentals of Louisiana Notarial Law and Practice. ... An affordable addition to the Self-Study Sherpa Series from Quid Pro Books.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Steven Alan Childress is a professor of law at Tulane, since 1988. He earned a JD from Harvard and a PhD from Berkeley. He clerked in Shreveport for the federal court and practiced law in California. He is a practicing Louisiana notary public and a member of the Louisiana Notary Association. He is the co-author of the legal treatise 'Federal Standards of Review,' edited two volumes on legal ethics, and annotated a modern edition of Oliver Wendell Holmes' 'The Common Law.'
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