| Sub: CA Bar Exam Score - Minimum Essay, PT and MBE to Pass |
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Author: Brian Moquin [35]
05 Feb 2010 12:30 AM
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The scaling affects your score, and there's a 2.2% to 3.1% difference between July and February, with February being harder, based solely on the difference in scaling. You can find out exactly how well you'd need to do by playing with my CBX Score Analysis spreadsheets, which I've posted here before. Here are links to the threads in which they appear:
All are 100% accurate, but it's probably most useful to use the one with the February 2009 scalings to assess how well you need to do this February. Best, Brian 408.300.0022 LawPrism.com - effective, affordable, online bar prep for the California Bar Exam
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Author: Jeff [21298]
05 Feb 2010 02:41 AM
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Lawdood, I apologize. I didn't realize that you had done the .65 and .35 when you listed those figures. I was reading on my cell phone and obviously didn't have a calculator to back into your math. I'm sorry if I was less than kind. You obviously have the math down pat. The variation between our numbers is just based on the scaling differences. It's odd to think the MBE in July scaled higher than February. I thought the MBE in July was so much easier than before that there'd be no separating the men from the boys. I learned under the old PMBR format that the youngin's refer to as the "old confusing way." Essays are clearly more difficult over the past three bar exams, and MBE's seemed a bit easier and PT's a lot easier. Could be that my prep for my third bar was so much more intense after finally deciding I was going to kick the bar examiners in the nuts, and did so with much more ease than my prior two attempts. I had to live it, breathe it, drink it, and sleep with it before I knew that beast well enough to conquer it. Studying for and passing the bar exam was BY FAR harder than all of law school all put together. I missed studying so much that I enrolled in the LL.M. in Taxation program at GGU. Call me a glutton for punishment. ;-) My Feb bar had the same raw score as the prior July, but was about 50 points lower in the scaled score. When plugging in the July scaling formula, my score was a mere tenths of a point different than July's scaled score. Higher MBE's cause I studied the bejesus out of them, but lower essays cause I didn't learn how to study on my own and manage time effectively since my study buddy passed on our first attempt. Don't be surprised if you see a lower score in February than your first attempt in July. The scaling formula is more harsh and the depression associated with the prior failure can be a recipe for disaster. I'm living proof. Thankfully, the third time was a charm. Formalized IRAC was the key for me. It took 46 essays and 8 PT's graded by my tutor, John Crossfield, for me to master the bar exam. One PT a week, no exceptions. All writing under timed conditions and closed book. Practice, practice, practice. The bar exam was just another day in the lonely life of a bar candidate because I finally found the discipline I needed. Pay a tutor money to grade your exams so that you're wasting money if you get behind. It's very motivational. I wasn't about to spend my precious money on grading and then not turn in my assignments when it was pay for it whether you did the work or not. Hell no, I'm gonna get my money's worth! What it really got me was my bar pass. Woohoo! Reward yourself with the very best thing that you crave most upon completion of the part you hate the most. Mine was riding my motorcycle after I finished my PT for the week. If I wanted to go riding with the boys that weekend, the PT had to be done and turned in for grading by the deadline, or no motorcycle. Threaten my grade, okay I'll study. Threaten to take away my most favorite thing in the world, and you'll have my PT on your desk in a few hours. There's no way I was going to miss that! Pick your own reward. Write something every single day. Every day. Log your MBE mistakes by writing your own rule of law, then review that every day, and on the morning and at lunch on MBE day. Worked wonders for me. I worried the MBE's on exam day were too easy cause I studied the crap out of them. But there's no replacing good formalized IRAC. I increased my MBE from 147 to 156 (scaled) and let my writing slide on my second bar exam. Big mistake. Once I hired a writing tutor, which I should have done on my first bar(!), I had it in the bag. I only wished someone had told me that BarBri, et al is no substitute for a writing tutor. Learn from my mistake. Now go write that PT this week and those six essays on the other days. Good luck!
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