The California Bar faced serious issues during its recent exam, including the use of faulty software and AI-generated questions, leading to false failures for some examinees. Recent reports indicate that four individuals were later found to have passed due to a clerical error in scoring. Praise was given for the eventual correction, but it raises concerns about the consequences for those incorrectly notified about passing or failing. The ongoing reviews hope to ensure fairness moving forward. This situation highlights systemic flaws in the Bar's examination process.
As messy as this outcome was, the silver lining is that the outcome came out in the favor of the people the Bar had to contact with upgraded grades.
Four more people have passed after the Bar said it caught a failure to properly impute scores and a 'clerical error.'
Maybe the real alternative to provisional licensing was to score every applicant's test correctly the first time.
What would happen if some of the test takers got false passes? Do you make the call knowing that they'll likely lose whatever job they have at the moment?
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