What the Uniform Bar Exam Means for Score Portability - St Francis School of Law (2024)

What the Uniform Bar Exam Means for Score Portability - St Francis School of Law (1)

The Uniform Bar Exam Makes Score Portability a Reality in Some States

Decades of work by noted legal authorities have finally made some progress on a long-held dream: a national bar exam. Thirty-six jurisdictions have adopted the Uniform Bar Exam (UBE) as all or most of their bar exams as of this writing (February 2020), though some will transition as late as 2021.

UBE jurisdictions agree to administer and grade the exam uniformly, and to accept scores of UBE test-takers from other UBE jurisdictions. This allows a UBE taker to become licensed in another state, within certain time limits, without taking the bar exam again. This saves millions of dollars of direct and opportunity costs for those candidates every year, supports access to justice in all those jurisdictions by making licensure more affordable, and delivers a measure of consistency and quality in testing that is lacking in other jurisdictions without the UBE.

How Does the Exam Work?

The UBE works because it is a combination of familiar exams, already used by many states. UBE testers take the Multistate Bar Exam (MBE), the Multistate Essay Exam (MEE), and the Multistate Performance Test (MPT) over the course of two grueling days. The MBE is, of course, machine scored, and the UBE states agree to calibrate grading of the MEE and MPT to national standards. The maker of these tests and the proponent of the UBE, the National Conference of Bar Examiners (NCBE), provides extensive grader training for each exam, to help the state achieve this calibration. Common grading is the key to UBE score portability, because states need to be ready to rely on other states’ grading if they are going to accept the scores and admit the applicant without testing again. The UBE is arguably more reliably graded than any state-specific exam because of this extensive calibration and standard-setting.

Forty jurisdictions use the MBE/MEE/MPT combination in some fashion now, making it the most common way of testing professional competence in the nation, by far. While some of these states do not technically administer the UBE, they still use all three of these tests for parts of their exam. One of the odd reasons for that is score portability, which many, but not all, states want to accept. Generally, if a state uses those exams but has not adopted the UBE, it is likely because the state does not want to participate in the score portability or calibration components of the UBE.

Which States Use the Uniform Bar Exam?

What the Uniform Bar Exam Means for Score Portability - St Francis School of Law (2)

The thirty-six jurisdictions that have adopted the UBE are: Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Connecticute, the District of Columbia, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oregon, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Washington, West Virginia, Wyoming, and the Virgin Islands.

Though these jurisdictions have all adopted it, the UBE won’t be transitioned officially in Ohio until July 2020 and Texas until February 2021.

How Do I Transfer My Uniform Bar Exam Score?

To transfer a score, an applicant contacts the testing jurisdiction to request a score transfer to the destination jurisdiction(s). If the applicant’s test score meets the destination jurisdiction’s minimum – and isn’t too old; most states have limits — the applicant can be admitted without testing again. Moral character and fitness review, the Multistate Professional Responsibility Exam (MPRE), and other requirements still apply.

Jurisdictions that accept score transfer will even accept scores from applicants who did not pass the exam in the testing jurisdiction. If the exam score meets the destination’s minimum score, even if the applicant did not pass elsewhere, the applicant can be admitted in the other state. The differences in minimum required scores can be substantial. Colorado requires a 276 score for passing the UBE, but Minnesota requires only 260. This provides another option for test takers who miss it “by a whisker” in their testing jurisdiction.

Score portability also makes the UBE states attractive to forward-thinking law grads. States like New York, Massachusetts, Maryland, and Colorado want to compete for the best lawyers nationally and make it easier for firms to open offices and serve national and multinational clients from their states. Score portability makes a state more globally attractive to industry, technology, and wealth. That was reportedly, one of the most important reasons Texas just announced it will join the UBE tidal wave; to stay competitive and get score portability.

Why Isn’t the Universal Bar Exam Accepted in California?

Bar exam score portability for Californians is still a distant dream. California runs its own, very similar bar exam and does not accept test scores from other jurisdictions. Along with California, Florida, Georgia, Michigan and Pennsylvania are the other big-state Uniform Bar Exam hold-outs. Most of these states still have a unified bar, where everyone is required to join and the bar largely or wholly controls admission to practice.

California did, recently, separate its regulatory and trade association functions. The new California Lawyers Association has no role in deciding what’s on the bar exam, how it is scored, or who gets admitted. That’s up to the Committee of Bar Examiners, the new State Bar regulatory agency, and the California Supreme Court.

Should California join the UBE movement? Opinions differ, of course. It is already home to many of the tech and industrial firms that drive the new economy, so competitiveness may not be a concern. California has also always maintained a sense of its “exceptionalism” about the bar exam, as the inventor of Performance Testing and the three-day bar exam, among other things.

But barriers to entry to the legal profession have costs. California firms are starting to feel the pinch of not always attracting the best and brightest graduates from the best law schools, especially impacting graduate diversity. Because many smart graduates are unwilling to risk failing an exam that flunks more exam takers than any other state — now the majority fail, exam after exam, in California. Recently 170 corporate counsels threatened to withhold their business from law firms that cannot demonstrate diversity among their attorneys. And, recently-released data shows the California bar exam’s high passing standard (often referred to as the “cut score”) disproportionately impacts applicants of color, either excluding them from practice altogether in California or causing them to repeat the exam one or more times. If California changes, it will only be because law firms and applicants succeed in raising the issue to ultimate decision-maker on the cut score — the California Supreme Court.

California has one of the highest performing applicant pools in the country, as evidenced by the scores achieved by California takers of the standardized, machine-graded MBE. A move to the UBE, with essay and performance test grading calibrated with other states, would control for present scoring variation and reveal just how exceptional — or unexceptional; the data would tell us — is the California test taker population. Score portability might just be part of the solution to California’s massive justice gap, too, by admitting competent lawyers tested by the uniform exam, within national standards

A very useful NCBE presentation on the Uniform Bar Exam containing, among other things, required minimum UBE scores for all UBE jurisdictions, the maximum age of score each jurisdiction will accept, and a map of those jurisdictions which also have a local law component or requirement, can be found at: http://www.ncbex.org/pdfviewer/?file=%2Fdmsdocument%2F209

The NCBE also offers a useful set of FAQ’s on score portability here: http://www.ncbex.org/exams/ube/score-portability/

What the Uniform Bar Exam Means for Score Portability - St Francis School of Law (3)

Gregory J. Brandes is a law professor and Dean of St. Francis School of Law. He is an expert on legal education and admission to the bar and is admitted to the bars of the United States Supreme Court, Colorado, and Illinois.

What the Uniform Bar Exam Means for Score Portability - St Francis School of Law (2024)

FAQs

What the Uniform Bar Exam Means for Score Portability - St Francis School of Law? ›

The UBE is designed to test knowledge and skills that every lawyer should be able to demonstrate prior to becoming licensed to practice law. It results in a portable score that can be used to apply for admission in other UBE jurisdictions.

What is a good score on the uniform bar exam? ›

The lowest possible passing score of 266 will suffice in states like South Carolina, Montana, and some others. Depending on how many people have taken the UBE, a score of 280 is approximately the 73rd percentile. A 300 is in about the 90th percentile, and 330 is in the top 1% of all scores.

What is the difference between the Uniform bar exam and the Multistate bar exam? ›

Test format: The UBE is a 2-day exam consisting of three components (the MBE, the MEE, and the MPT). The MBE is a 6-hour exam with 200 multiple-choice questions administered over two 3-hour sessions, one in the morning and one in the afternoon.

How hard is the uniform bar exam? ›

The UBE is difficult and is unlike any other exam you have taken. But thousands of examinees pass the UBE every year. If you've been successful enough to graduate from law school, you certainly have the ability to pass the UBE. If you put in the time.

What is the content of uniform bar exam? ›

The UBE tests knowledge of general principles of law, legal analysis and reasoning, factual analysis, and communication skills to determine readiness to enter legal practice in any jurisdiction.

Is 270 a good bar score? ›

Uniform Bar Exam states require a score between 260 and 280 to pass the Uniform Bar Exam. So, if your score was above 280, you technically received a score that is considered passing in every Uniform Bar Exam state.

What is a bad bar exam score? ›

Those with total scale scores after one reading below 1350 fail the exam.

Which state is the hardest to pass the bar exam? ›

California is widely considered to have the hardest bar exam, due to its low pass rate and the difficulty of the content and constraints of the exam.

Is bar exam harder than law school? ›

The bar exam is like the final boss of a video game. After spending your entire academic career taking tests, this is the final, most difficult one you'll face. Unlike the LSAT, the bar exam does test your knowledge of the law itself. You'll be tested on a wide array of subjects.

What is the hardest subject on the bar exam? ›

Many aspiring attorneys who have taken or are presently studying for the bar exam, however, appear to agree that the following three topics are the most difficult: Real Property. Contracts. Civil Procedure.

What is the difference between the uniform bar exam and the California bar exam? ›

California's written portion consists of one 90-minute performance test and five one-hour essays. The Uniform Bar Exam consists of two 90-minute performance tests and six 30-minute essays. The performance tests administered by California and the UBE are not identical, but they are relatively similar.

What is the top score for uniform bar exam? ›

The maximum possible score on the UBE is 400.

What is a uniform bar? ›

The UBE is a standardized bar exam created by the National Conference of Bar Examiners (NCBE). It is designed to test knowledge and skills that every lawyer should have before becoming licensed to practice law.

What is a passing grade on the bar exam? ›

The written portion and MBE portion are both weighted equally—each section is worth 50% of the overall scaled score. As mentioned above, you need a score of 1390 out of 2000 possible points to pass the California bar exam.

Is 300 a good Ube score? ›

A score of 280 on the UBE corresponds to the 73rd percentile, a score of 300 to the 90th, and a score of 330 to the top 1% of all scores.

What is the scoring scale for the BAR exam? ›

Non-UBE MBE passing scores are more challenging to nail down. For example, California's bar exam passing score is 1390 out of 2000 points. You should aim for a scaled score of 139, but there is no way to accurately gauge what raw score you need.

What is the top 1% score on the BAR exam? ›

As regulated in Texas, a score of 270 is the minimum required, while a score of 330 or above places a candidate in the top 1% nationally. "The exam was very challenging," Khanh said. "I did not imagine such a high score."

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