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How Aanuoluwa Odole Earned a Double First Class at the University of Ibadan and Nigerian Law School

By Prosper Mene

In the competitive world of Nigerian legal education, achieving a First Class honours at both the undergraduate level and the Nigerian Law School is a rare feat reserved for the most disciplined and determined. Aanuoluwa Odole, a 25-year-old graduate, has joined this elite group, emerging with double First Class honours from the University of Ibadan (UI) and the Nigerian Law School. Her story is one of self-awareness, adaptability, and quiet resilience.

Aanuoluwa describes herself as a naturally curious and expressive person — the type who devours YouTube video essays and eagerly seeks spoilers for her favourite shows. That inquisitive spirit served her well in law, a field that rewards deep understanding and analytical thinking. She earned her LL.B. with First Class honours from the Faculty of Law at the University of Ibadan before proceeding to the Bar Part II programme.

Her journey to the Law School was not without initial apprehension. Assigned to the Lagos campus — often described as more intense than the preferred Abuja campus — she leaned on faith and family encouragement. “My parents told me to just trust God,” she recalled. She settled in quickly, forming strong bonds with her roommates, and approached the rigorous programme with an open but determined mindset.

Mastering Law School on Her Own Terms

Law School demands a level of intensity many undergraduates are unprepared for. Aanuoluwa quickly realised her previous habit of cramming close to exams would not suffice. Instead, she built a flexible routine that ramped up in intensity as exams approached, taking each day as it came.

She remained fiercely committed to methods that worked for her, even when they diverged from the crowd:

She skipped the mentorship programme and eventually stopped going to the library and reading rooms when they no longer served her.

Textbooks were never her preference.

She focused on understanding subjects chronologically, treating courses like Civil Litigation as unfolding stories rather than fragmented topics.

She created a Notion tracker to monitor her mastery of each topic, testing herself with multiple-choice questions and assigning percentages to identify weak areas for targeted revision.

This self-aware approach was tested during Corporate Law Practice, a subject that brought her to tears. Convinced she had underperformed after an all-night session, she leaned on her support system of family and friends. Her results proved otherwise.

She switched strategies mid-programme, incorporating past questions during her second externship and adapting materials as needed, always prioritising effectiveness over convention.

While academics were central, Aanuoluwa values the relationships she built. Though she wishes she had been more socially outgoing, she recognises that staying true to herself likely contributed to her success. “Maybe if I had [been more social], the outcome would have been different,” she mused, acknowledging the butterfly effect of small choices.

She also faced health challenges, a stark reminder of the need for balance. Her advice to aspiring First Class candidates is heartfelt and practical: Stay true to your methods and abandon what stops working. Prioritise your health. And try to enjoy the process.

Looking Ahead with Confidence

Today, Aanuoluwa is excited about the opportunities her double First Class unlocks, from career prospects to financial rewards. “Five years from now, I want to be excelling at a job I absolutely love,” she shared. Having proven her mettle twice, she carries a quiet confidence: “It’s not a fluke.”

She credits God for the journey and remains grateful for the doors now opening before her.

Aanuoluwa Odole’s achievement is more than a testament to academic brilliance. It highlights the power of knowing oneself, adapting intelligently, and maintaining balance amid pressure. In a system that can feel homogenising, her success reminds aspiring lawyers that the most effective path is often the one walked authentically.

Tags : Aanuoluwa OdoleLaw School
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