Deans Ask California Supreme Court to Pump Brakes on Kaplan-Written Bar Exam
Deans from 15 ABA-approved law schools said justices should also consider granting an across-the-board score increase for those who take the February 2025 bar exam given all the uncertainty that now surrounds the test.
September 19, 2024 at 07:32 PM
4 minute read
Deans from California law schools have asked the state Supreme Court to block the state bar from using Kaplan-written materials on the February 2025 bar exam and to consider "an across-the-board" score boost for applicants given the uncertainty that now surrounds the test.
The letter, dated Sept. 17 and filed with the court, said the deans have "grave concerns" about whether the bar can offer Kaplan-written multiple-choice questions "in a responsible manner" by the Feb. 25 exam start. The letter is signed by 15 deans from American Bar Association-approved schools, including Erwin Chemerinsky of UC Berkeley, David Faigman of UC College of the Law San Francisco and Franita Tolson of USC Gould School of Law.
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