Monday, January 10, 2011

Preparing for the Bar Exam - Multiple Choice Questions

Multiple choice questions can be tricky because your answer is either right or wrong, and the MBE poses a challenge for even the best students because there are so many questions and so little time -- the MBE tests your knowledge of the substantive law, your reading comprehension and reasoning skills, your ability to work quickly and efficiently, and your capacity to remain focused and functioning over a long period of time. But, don't worry, your bar review course should provide you with all the substantive law you need to know; and your law school education has taught you how “to think like a lawyer” -- the MBE questions require that you put the two together, and the best way to do this is to practice!

There are countless places to get practice questions - for example, your bar review courses include hundreds of practice questions, and the bar examiners also release old MBE questions for you to practice. Do not forget about the released questions because the experience in working with actual MBE questions is invaluable in helping you gain familiarity with the bar examiner’s specific use of language and framing of issues.

Practicing the questions is no substitute for knowing the black letter law. A superficial understanding of broad concepts won’t be enough to allow you to distinguish between the answer choices; instead, you will need a detailed understanding of the rules. Your analysis begins with articulation of the issue in the fact pattern, and from there you need to know the rule of law.

The more questions you answer, the more comfortable you will be with the process of answering multiple choice questions, and the more prepared you will be for them on bar day. Ideally, you should answer thousands of questions. But just “doing questions” is not enough. There is a right way and a wrong way to “do” questions and you need to know the difference.

What does it mean to “do” questions? When using the multiple choice as a practice tool, there “right way” to work with the questions. You must read carefully and actively to spot signal words and legally significant facts. Pay attention to the bar examiners’ particular use of language. The bar examiners carefully construct MBE questions to contain all the facts you need to answer the question. You must rely solely on these facts to answer the question. Of course you may draw reasonable inferences from the facts but you cannot fabricate your own or create “what if” scenarios.

In addition to keeping to the facts, don’t let yourself go off on tangents based on possible theories you see raised in the facts. This is one of the very reasons you’ll read the question stem before you read the fact pattern — to keep from going astray.

Next, just as you must remain focused on the facts as presented in the question, you must apply the rule of law to the facts without hesitation. You cannot substitute your instincts for what you know is legally correct. Your job is to follow the law and apply it to the facts mechanically.

Remember, there are four basic steps for answering a multiple choice question. You will follow this sequence for every question you practice. After a bit of practice, the process will become second nature to you to approach a question this way. You’ll soon see that it yields results.

For each question, you will:

1. Read the call-of-the-question or stem and then read the fact pattern
2. Find the issue in the facts
3. Identify the rule that addresses the issue
4. Reach a conclusion without looking at the answer choices

And don't forget, it is important to recognize that analysis of the answer choices deserves as much of your time and attention as the fact pattern. There is a lot of valuable information to be found within the answer choices.

Update: See also Preparing for the Bar Exam - The Multistate Bar Exam ("MBE").

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