6 Skills to Pass Bar Exam Essays


Bar Exam Essays are worth the most points and are the most important part of your bar exam prep. You have been doing law essays throughout your law school career, and they are going to be the biggest focus of your bar exam.

That being said, there are several skills to develop in order to succeed in passing these essays:

1) Issue Spotting

Each issue on the bar exam is worth a designated amount of points, from 5 points to even as high as 40points! If you don’t see the issue, you’ll get zero points, bottom line. If you see the issue and can throw some mumble jumble together, you’ll at least get partial points, merely for spotting the issue!

To pass the bar exam, you only need to spot and do well on the major issues. If you can pick up the minor issues as well, you’re setting yourself up for a Super Bowl Victory (even during this NFL lockout)!  Click here for issue spotting tips.

2) Outlining/Organization

Outlining is all about Organization. One of the most overlooked and important areas of the bar exam is having an organized, easy-to-read answer, complete with underlined headings and nice, clean-cut paragraphs. You might think this is a ridiculous thing for bar exam graders to give/deduct points for.

However, remember they are testing to see if you are lawyer-ready. Lawyers must be organized and clear in their writing. A grader will spend 3 to 5 minutes grading your exam. They are only looking to make sure you got the right issues, and often scan your answer for key words and facts. Make it easy on them with a nice, organized answer so they don’t get confused, are happy, and give you a passing grade.  Click here for Outlining tips.

3) Rule Memorization

Rule memorization is obviously important for your bar exam. It’s always nice to know exactly what rule applies, remember it, write it, and apply it.

A mistake is to place too much emphasis on the importance of rule memorization. It’s about how you apply the rules. Even if you use the wrong rule on the exam, but have the right analysis, you get partial credit! On my bar exam, I used the name of a duty in Business Associations when doing a Professional Responsibility analysis (I think it was duty of loyalty).  Wrong name, hopefully the right rule, but a passing answer, nonetheless!

4) Lawyerly Writing

This is a very important technique to be good at. I had friends who went to ABA-approved schools, took barbri, knew all the rules, issue spotted well; however, plain and simply, their writing did not look like that of a lawyer.

It’s the one thing that bar exam prep programs don’t really emphasize or help you get better at. They will mostly assume you learned how to write properly in law school.

However, never fear. You can either get an individual tutor or even better, try this. Get a list of sample exam answers (preferably the ones barbri provides, not the model answers on the calbar website), and literally retype the answers they have. Do this a couple times and you will see a shift in your mindset and the way you formulate words and sentences. This technique helped me greatly in my bar exam prep.

5) Timing

Practice your timing for the bar exam. It’s quite shocking how many people merely focus on outlining or issue spotting exams rather than going through and doing a full-one hour exam under timed conditions.

Practice how you play. In the bar exam room, you will not be only outlining or issue spotting, you will be taking three essays in a three hour time period. Time budgeting is extremely important. Running out of time should not be an excuse you accept for yourself. You will have spent two months preparing. Make sure you are able to finish an exam in a one hour time period.

When bar exam day comes, who knows what emotional state you’ll be in. Practicing builds the foundational blocks that can’t be disrupted by anything when you walk into that door bar exam day.

6) Make up Rules on the Go

It’s a frightening idea to think you might open an essay and see issues or facts and have no idea what rule or area of law applies. Well, guess what? It will happen to you!

California is notorious for throwing at least one (or two, maybe three) essays that seem to just make your head turn. Our bar exam had an entire essay on government takings: partial and full takings. Of course, I remembered looking at takings one time early on during my bar prep.

So, the only thing I could do was make up the entire essay. This was especially hard because the facts were so limited. I basically made up rules I thought would be fair, wrote them confidently, and analyzed based on those rules – PASS!

So if you’re taking practice tests and you see something you don’t know, don’t just run to the Conviser mini-review (or to your fridge for a chocolate snack release). It’s a perfect opportunity to practice what’s going to happen on the bar exam. See what you think the issue is, make up a rule, and analyze based on your rule.

When you check the answer, you’ll often see that you were actually in the ball park of the right answer. You’ll probably get at least part of the rule and use most of the facts – which of course, is darn near passing. And that’s not bad for having no idea what the heck you were reading. See, all that freaking out isn’t really necessary, is it now?


“This name appears on the pass list”

Good luck on you bar exam prep!

Bar Exam Essays Part 1: How do they grade the bar exam essays?


You will spend close to two months, take dozens of practice essays, and spend a good two or three days in the bar exam.  That’s a lot of time to put into the exam, and how much time do you think the graders will invest into reading your essays?  About three to five minutes per essay, at most.

At least once before the exam, it’s a good idea to try the exercise of putting yourself in the shoes of the person who will be holding your fate:

1)      Set the timer to five minutes

2)      Click here to go to a sample essay answer on the calbar website

3)      Read an actual essay exam answer

4)      Come back when you’re done

See, it doesn’t actually take that long to read an answer.  Keep in mind, the exam answer you just read is a ‘model passing’ answer, and believe me when I say this, it is an amazingly well-written answer!  You don’t need to be even close to writing like this to pass.  But, hopefully you will see how CRUCIALLY IMPORTANT it is your essays are structured, organized, readable, and use headings (that topic is for a different post, coming soon).  For a grader to get through your essay in this short amount of time, it will need to be very readable.

Now, if you really want to feel like a bar exam grader, repeat the exercise dozens of times at 10:00pm.  You will be in a very similar situation to what the grader has to do, after spending a full day at work, coming home to his family, and is now trying to meet his deadline of reading 100 bar exam essays this week.  He doesn’t have a lot of time and needs to be very efficient and methodical in his reading.  The easier you make it on him, the better.

Process of Bar Exam Grading

Here is a rough review of the process the graders go through when grading your exam.

Bar exam graders are attorneys who have passed the bar and sign-up to be a grader.  They get paid a stipend (which is likely far less than what they make at their jobs).

After the bar exam is taken, a group of graders get together and take the same essay you just took.  They write out a full essay, including all the rules and analysis.  Then the graders meet together, look at what each of them wrote down, and create a ‘model’ answer.

Next, the graders get together with the student answers, and they’ll each grade the same student answer, giving their opinion of what the answer should receive.  They will then compare their opinions, discuss reasons why, and after several run-throughs, give a breakdown of how many points each issue is worth and a score of what they think that exam answer would deserve.

Then, they grade a second essay, running it through the same process and grading model they had created for the first essay, recalibrating any necessary point adjustments.  Eventually they find a model answer and grading system that all the graders can use.  Although, grading may seem subjective for each grader, believe it or not, if fifteen graders grade the same exam using this calibrated point system, each grader will typically fall within five points of each other.  This is to ensure fairness, equality, and eliminate personal subjectivity amongst anyone grading the exams.  Any grader who’s scores are consistently more than five points off from all the other graders is typically removed.

In California, if your total score for the performance test, essays, and MBE is greater than 1440 you pass!  If your score is below a 1390, you don’t pass.  If it falls between these two numbers, your exam is regraded by a different set of graders.  Hopefully, it is given more points as you still will need to hit the 1440 mark to pass.  For more information on the calibration process and regrading system, click here.

I hope this comforts you a little and gives you an idea of what your exam will go through after you finish uploading or turning it in on test day.

Good luck in passing your bar exam!

“This name appears on the pass list”


References:

All info stated in the article was according to a California barbri lecture I attended during my bar prep and the calbar website.

See Bar Exam Essays Part 2: 8 things Every Bar Essay should Have