Highlights
Probably the biggest mistake students make in doing assignments is that they don’t study as they would for an exam. Instead, they start by reading the assignment and then try to look up only the parts of the unit that look like they are relevant to the assignment. The trouble is, you cannot say what the relevant parts of the unit are without studying the unit first. In real life you need to understand all the concepts so that you can identify the relevant issues when a client approaches you. So the best preparation for the assignment is simply to study the course properly.
Understanding the modules preceding the assignment due date will be sufficient, but you can go beyond that if you wish. You will need a good conceptual understanding of the legal principles before you will be able to determine the appropriate business structure for your client. You will also need a good conceptual understanding to decide what to research and, more importantly, what NOT to research. And you will need a good conceptual understanding to report to your supervising partner.
Clearly, you need to start work on your assignment early. This is not the sort of assignment that you can do within a day or so of the due date. Written Report to Supervising Partner The report to the supervising partner must contain three things:1. The law relevant to the clients’ circumstances. They are making a decision about what business structure to adopt for their business, which may be very different from someone else’s business. You have to work out what is likely to be relevant to them, with regards to the given information. You should also make it clear why it is relevant.
2. Reasoning that weighs up the realistic options open to the client. Not all business structures will make sense for your client, but it is likely that at least one structure with unlimited liability and one limited liability structure will be relevant. The decision of which one to adopt depends on comparing the legal characteristics of each so that you and the client can weigh up.
3. A recommendation and an explanation of why you chose that recommendation. This should flow logically from the weighing up process in 2 above.
Your supervising partner is assumed to be an experienced professional, who probably knows the law you are reporting, although he/she may not know the detail and may not remember case names and section numbers, which you will have to provide in a Reference List. You can, therefore, speak in technical terms to the partner. The purpose of reporting to your partner is not to teach him/her the law they already know, but to convince them that you have done your research properly and that you have weighed up the alternatives sensibly and come to a sensible recommendation. The report to the supervising partner should contain the three things listed above. You should also provide a reference list. You can assume that the supervising partner has read the record of the interview with the client, so you will only need to refer to the facts when using them in your reasoning.© Copyright 2026 My Uni Papers – Student Hustle Made Hassle Free. All rights reserved.