--- name: justinian-bar-exam-prep-us-bar description: Use when a user is preparing for the US bar examination — primarily the Uniform Bar Exam (UBE) covering the MBE, MEE, and MPT, or state-specific exams (California, Florida, Virginia). Provides NCBE-aligned MBE drilling, MEE essay grading with rubric feedback, MPT timed practice, and MPRE ethics preparation. Jurisdiction: US. license: MIT metadata: id: justinian.bar-exam-prep-US-bar category: justinian jurisdictions: [US] priority: P2 intent: [bar-prep, us, ube, mbe, mee, mpt, mpre, california-bar] related: [justinian-curriculum-builder, justinian-flashcards-from-statute, justinian-exam-time-management-coach, justinian-case-explainer-socratic, justinian-bar-exam-prep-uk-sqe] source: Louis — HAQQ Legal AI (github.com/sboghossian/mini-claude-for-legal) version: "1.0" --- # Justinian — US Bar Exam Prep (UBE + State) ## Scope Most US states use the Uniform Bar Exam (UBE), administered by the National Conference of Bar Examiners (NCBE). A UBE score is portable across UBE jurisdictions. This skill covers the full UBE and flags key state-specific variations for California, Florida, and Virginia — the three major non-UBE or hybrid states. ## UBE structure | Component | Format | Weight | Duration | |---|---|---|---| | MBE (Multistate Bar Examination) | 200 MCQs | 50% | Day 2: 6 hours | | MEE (Multistate Essay Examination) | 6 essays | 30% | Day 1 AM: 3 hours | | MPT (Multistate Performance Test) | 2 tasks | 20% | Day 1 PM: 3 hours | Total: two-day exam. Most UBE states require a score of 260–270 (out of 400) to pass; varies by state. ## MBE — Multistate Bar Examination ### Subjects (7 tested) | Subject | Approximate % of questions | |---|---| | Civil Procedure | ~25 questions | | Constitutional Law | ~25 questions | | Contracts (including UCC Article 2) | ~25 questions | | Criminal Law and Procedure | ~25 questions | | Evidence | ~25 questions | | Real Property | ~25 questions | | Torts | ~25 questions | ### MBE technique **Format**: 200 questions over 6 hours = 1.8 minutes per question. Answer all questions — there is no penalty for wrong answers. **Approach per question**: 1. Read the call of the question first (what is being asked?) 2. Read the facts actively — identify which subject area is implicated 3. Apply the rule to the facts; eliminate clearly wrong answers 4. On close calls: NCBE tests nuances; the "most correct" answer is the one that precisely applies the rule **Common traps by subject**: | Subject | Common trap | |---|---| | Contracts | Common law vs UCC distinction; mirror image rule vs battle of forms (UCC 2-207) | | Constitutional Law | State action requirement; levels of scrutiny (rational basis / intermediate / strict) | | Crim Law / Procedure | Common law felony murder vs modern MPC approach; 4th Amendment curtilage | | Evidence | Hearsay vs non-hearsay; present sense impression vs excited utterance timing | | Real Property | Future interests (remainder, executory interest, reversion); RAP | | Civil Procedure | Personal jurisdiction (International Shoe / Walden); Erie doctrine | | Torts | Negligence vs strict liability triggers; comparative vs contributory negligence | **Pacing rule**: if you have not answered after 90 seconds, mark your best answer and move on. Return at the end if time permits. ## MEE — Multistate Essay Examination ### Format 6 essay questions, 30 minutes each. NCBE publishes the list of MEE subjects (expands beyond the 7 MBE subjects): **Additional MEE subjects** (beyond MBE 7): - Business Associations (agency, partnerships, corporations, LLCs) - Conflict of Laws - Family Law - Secured Transactions (UCC Article 9) - Trusts and Estates (wills, intestacy, trust formation and administration) ### MEE rubric and grading NCBE graders use a point grid. A well-structured answer that: 1. Identifies all legal issues in the question 2. States the applicable rule for each issue 3. Applies the rule to the specific facts 4. Reaches a clear conclusion ...will score better than a longer answer that misidentifies the central issue. **IRAC is the default framework for all MEE answers.** On a 30-minute essay, a typical strong answer covers 3–5 issues and is approximately 1–2 pages. **Common MEE error patterns**: - Issue-spotting only without rule application - Applying the wrong body of law (e.g., applying common law contract rules to a UCC sale of goods) - Forgetting the MEE-specific subjects when prepping (Secured Transactions and Conflict of Laws are under-studied) ## MPT — Multistate Performance Test ### Format 2 tasks, 90 minutes each. Each MPT provides a "file" (client memo, deposition excerpt, contract, factual record) and a "library" (cases, statutes, regulations). The task is to produce a specific document: a memo, a brief, a letter, a contract clause analysis. **Key rules**: - Use only the library provided — outside law knowledge is not tested and should not be inserted - The task document is specified; follow the format and structure requested exactly - Demonstrate legal analysis and persuasive writing; not comprehensive law review **Justinian MPT coaching**: - Time-boxed MPT simulations (90 minutes) - Feedback on: task compliance, use of library sources, analytical quality, writing clarity ## MPRE — Multistate Professional Responsibility Exam A separate 60-question ethics exam required by most states: - Tests the ABA Model Rules of Professional Conduct - 2 hours; closed book - Passing scores range by state (~75–86 depending on jurisdiction) - Typically taken during law school (after Professional Responsibility course) or before bar admission **Key MPRE topics**: confidentiality (Rule 1.6); conflicts of interest (1.7, 1.8, 1.9); competence (1.1); communications with represented and unrepresented parties; fees; advertising; supervisory responsibilities. ## State-specific variations ### California Bar Exam California does not fully use UBE. The California Bar Exam includes: - California-specific essays (5 essays) testing California law variations - Performance test (similar to MPT) - MBE component (UBE MBE questions) - Separate MCLE and character and fitness requirements **Key California-only subjects**: Community property, California civil procedure (distinct from FRCP), California Evidence Code variations, Professional Responsibility (California-specific rules differ from ABA Model Rules). ### Florida Bar Exam Florida uses UBE MBE but Florida-specific essays: - Tests Florida-specific rules in property, torts, procedure - Separate Florida Board of Bar Examiners character and fitness process ### Virginia Bar Exam Virginia uses a hybrid: UBE MBE scores accepted for transfer, but Virginia has separate essay component testing Virginia-specific law. ## Character and fitness All jurisdictions require a character and fitness review. Disclosure of criminal records, academic misconduct, and financial irregularities (including significant debt) is required. Timeline for this review can be lengthy — initiate early. ## Justinian-specific support - **MBE drills**: NCBE-aligned questions by subject; explanations for each answer; weakness tracking by subject - **MEE essay grading**: submit practice essays; receive rubric-based scoring with line-by-line commentary - **MPT simulations**: full 90-minute timed practice with realistic files and libraries; feedback on task compliance - **MPRE practice**: 60-question mock exam + ABA Model Rules flashcards - **California prep module**: California-specific supplement covering community property, CA civil procedure, CA professional responsibility ## Caveats Bar exam format, passing scores, and accepted scores differ by jurisdiction and are updated annually. Always verify current NCBE guidance and state-specific requirements. This guide reflects publicly available NCBE and state bar information and is a preparation resource, not an authoritative source. ## Related skills - [[justinian-curriculum-builder]] - [[justinian-flashcards-from-statute]] - [[justinian-exam-time-management-coach]] - [[justinian-case-explainer-socratic]] - [[justinian-bar-exam-prep-uk-sqe]]