Rethinking the licensing of new attorneys is a healthy
exercise, and it is commendable that this Symposium presented a forum for
doing so. The lawyer licensing process can be improved only through
challenge and refinement. There is danger in settling for the status quo
and danger in complacency. Reexamining the bar examination is appropriate,
and there is no heresy in questioning its content and efficacy. Any risks
associated with imagining innovative approaches are worth taking.
Of course, not every proposed solution will yield a
process that is better than that which currently exists. New ideas are
appropriately tested and tempered. My reaction to the ideas floated at
this Symposium is that they all deserve discussion, and after discussion,
some should not survive—at least as alternatives to current licensing
processes. Moreover, while some of the ideas presented here may prove to
be worthy adjuncts to the bar examination, I see in the better-developed
alternatives more about “and” and less about “or”; that is,
the better ideas lend themselves more favorably as additions to, rather
than as substitutions for, the bar examination.
To establish a foundation for discussion, perhaps we
can agree that the bar examination must be more than a rite of passage.
Licensing processes, including most significantly the test instruments
that are administered, should exist solely to meet the objectives of
consumer protection. When licensing processes stray from that
objective—whether for economic reasons, or for socially positive purposes
such as public service, or for something else—they fail us. This is not to
say that the bar examination as we know it cannot be improved; indeed, the
purpose of the National Conference of Bar Examiners (my organization),
since its formation in 1931, has been to foster better bar examining.
Any alternative to the bar examination must meet the
essential measurement criteria of reliability and validity. Achieving an
acceptable score on a bar examination—or an alternative—must result from
something other than the luck of the draw on a particular test date and
must relate to requisite entry level competencies that have been
determined through a broad-based collective effort. These are the
linchpins of any assessments that deserve our reliance and respect and
that affect the destiny of the license-seeker. In a high-stakes tests, and
the bar examination certainly qualifies as high-stakes, any alternative to
the bar examination that falls short in terms of reliability or validity
should be rejected.
In addition, any process that is advanced as an
alternative to the bar examination must, beyond meeting the objective of
consumer protection, be fair to the would-be entrant to the profession and
must be administered and evaluated in a manner that is consistent across
all applicants, including those with special needs covered by the
Americans with Disabilities Act.
There are many ways in which to muddy the waters when
alternatives to the bar examination are discussed. I will treat only a few
in this Commentary, and then I will make a few observations about the ways
in which a better bar examination—rather than no bar examination—might be
a preferable alternative for serious exploration.
The proposals under discussion at this Symposium tend
to fall into two categories: (1) those that are offered up as alternative
vehicles for assessment and (2) those that are not designed as licensing
tests at all, but rather as vehicles for some perceived good. The
rationales underlying the proposals differ, with some focusing quite
negatively on the contemporary bar examination (understanding that the bar
examination is actually not a monolith but a product of each
jurisdiction’s determination) and others focusing on value-laden
justifications such as public service, better use of a new graduate’s
time, the filling in of certain educational gaps, and other similar
goals.
Some of the alternatives presented at this Symposium
do not incorporate much in the way of an assessment at all; they appear to
be advanced more in the way of arguing that a law degree and some
contribution of public service should be sufficient per se for
entry to practice. In fact, the arguments for these approaches are really
arguments that law should depart from other professions and offer
unregulated, or very loosely regulated, entrance to the profession. I
believe that the completion of a J.D., even one from an accredited
institution, does not serve to establish dispositively that every law
graduate of every law school should be licensed to practice law without
further assessment, and I find it to be self-serving for law deans and
others to assert a contrary position.
Others argue that a series of observations of
candidates by an assortment of raters, who are of necessity not uniformly
coached to apply similar fine-grained performance criteria, will tell us
enough about a candidate to winnow the capable and prepared from the
incapable and unprepared. This approach accords confidence to judgments
unaided by the benefit of applicant volumes and assumes that an isolated
mentor or observer can make decisions that are ultimately consistent
across an applicant population. Curiously, some critics belittle the
experience and the ability of bar examiners to make judgments about
candidate competencies even as they would entrust a much narrower field of
applicants to limited scrutiny by persons of no greater or better (and
perhaps lesser and weaker) experience.
Some argue that evaluation of candidates for a license
should be subjected to a standardized set of interactions with coached
“clients,” citing developments in the professional entrance requirements
for physicians. These simulations, which are quite expensive on a
per-candidate basis, offer facial validity that holds understandable
appeal; however, what is often lost in the discussion is that the
structured simulations in medicine are designed to come toward the end of
a series of assessments of substantive knowledge that have been
administered in stages. No one, including the physicians, seriously
advances that we should be licensing physicians on the basis of these
exercises alone.
Some advocate alternatives to the bar examination out
of concern that students spilling out of law school hit the streets, often
as solo or small-firm practitioners, too poorly prepared for the
responsibilities and skills required for the practice of the profession of
law. This begs the question as to whether some of the enthusiasm for
alternatives to the bar examination would be better directed at remedying
deficits perceived in the bedrock legal education in which students have
invested three years of their lives, and out of which they often carry
huge loan burdens. The placement of public service initiatives and
monitored practice opportunities in law school—perhaps in the oft-maligned
third year—might permit new lawyers to identify and address deficiencies
in an educational context.
Finally, even the best of the alternatives—or the best
elements of the worst—must be workable. Experimentation can of course
occur in a fairly small petri dish; however, viable solutions will only be
feasible if they can be scaled to meet the needs of over 50,000 first-time
test takers each year. Furthermore, the acceptability of alternatives to
the current licensing structure needs to give the candidate in a
particular state a license that is “good currency” for use in securing a
license elsewhere, especially in an age when portability of licenses is
increasingly significant.
Now as to what might be done to the current bar
examination: first, it may be time to think in terms of a staging of the
assessments such that candidates are tested, as are medical students, on
substantive matters after their exposure to core areas of law—with testing
of more skills-related competencies toward the end of their educational
experience. Nowhere is it ordained that the bar examination must be
administered at the end of each July following law school graduation, for
example. The test—or, in a staged assessment setting, the terminal
test—could be administered closer in time to law school graduation.
There is a need for greater efficiencies in grading
the essay products on the bar examination, and some innovative thinking
will be needed for licensing to achieve this goal. Some critics of the bar
examination condemn the loss of time as candidates prepare and wait for
their results. Devising grading methodologies and grading processes that
accelerate the grading of essay-type tests could release new lawyers to
practice sooner. Perhaps we should pause to consider ways in which to
lessen the time drain that currently exists before and after the bar
examination.
Full participation of the academy, the courts, and
those in the profession with interest in what new lawyers should actually
be expected to know and perform could play a major role in shaping better
assessments. It may be that the product of such an initiative might draw
on some of the elements noted in some of the alternatives promoted,
whether as opportunities for learning or as aspects that would lend
themselves to some type of assessment.
The gulf between the bar examination and what legal
educators know about the contemporary bar examination is matched by the
gulf between law schools and the perception of bar examiners about the
contemporary curriculum and teaching and research methodologies, some of
which have shifted drastically over the last decade. These twin gulfs must
be bridged. As examples, the rise of clinical education and the
enhancement of legal writing as an important element in the formation of
lawyers are unknown to many bar examiners.
A constructive bombardment of ideas, as well as
broad-based participation in a national discussion, will aid in the
development of viable solutions. This Symposium has offered a wonderful
beginning and an excellent framework within such dialogue can take
place.