The Big Fail Part II: Law Schools Clamber to Raise Bar Pass Rates
Renee Hutchins, Susan Freiwald, and Thomas Geu.
Renee Hutchins, Susan Freiwald, and Thomas Geu.

Renee Hutchins, Susan Freiwald and Thomas Geu.

Two years ago, the bar pass rate for first-time test takers at the University of the District of Columbia David A. Clarke School of Law sank to 38 percent. Although the school has never had a particularly high first-time pass rate, the plunge to less than 40 percent was a red flag for administrators.

“We have taken this as seriously as a heart attack, because it’s that important,” said Katherine “Shelley” Broderick, who was dean at the time.

To help reverse the trend, the school introduced a myriad of initiatives, which included requiring those who take on leadership roles with student organizations to have a grade-point average of 2.5 or higher. Administrators worried that weaker students were devoting too much time to those groups at the expense of their bar preparation.

But incoming dean Renée Hutchins acknowledges that it will take far more than that to solve the school’s bar exam woes—which they maintain is the law school’s top priority—and she is hopeful that a multifaceted approach will soon tip the scales.

How to reverse sliding bar exam pass rates is a puzzle that law deans across the country are trying to solve. The national average score on the Multistate Bar Exam—the multiple choice portion of the exam—hit a 34-year low last July, and thousands of law graduates each year are failing to make the cut.

The Big Fail
The Big Fail

Law.com analyzed the bar pass rates reported by schools to the American Bar Association between 2013 and 2017—the 2018 results weren't available when the numbers were crunched—and found that 35 of the 203 ABA-accredited law schools had pass rates decreases of more than 20 percent in those four years. Further, 42 of the ABA-accredited law schools saw their pass rate fall anywhere from 10 to 20 percent. (Still other schools, primarily the higher-ranked ones, have seen little change in their pass rates.)

There is plenty of debate about why pass rates have fallen, but most experts agree that the 36-percent decline in law school applicants between 2010 and 2016 played a major role. Many schools dipped deeper into their applicant pool and enrolled students with lower LSAT scores and undergraduate grades. Other elements such changing law school pedagogy and the rise of online bar exam preparation are also at play, they say.



Because the reasons for dropping pass rates are complex, schools are taking a variety of approaches to addressing the problem. Some schools are emphasizing the identification of students who need extra support early on—a trend National Conference of Bar Examiners president Judith Gundersen said has taken off in recent years. Others are hiring outside bar preparation providers to lead classes, or are making third-year bar preparation class mandatory. Some are encouraging professors to focus on bar exam topics during their courses and even retooling their curriculum to emphasize what is tested.

And many schools, including UDC, are trying elements of all those approaches. Located on a historically black college and university campus, UDC considers itself an “access” school, giving students with nontraditional backgrounds and lower LSAT scores the opportunity to pursue legal careers. Those students often need more than one try to pass the bar exam, but the school is aiming to up the percentage of students passing on the first try.

Administrators have rolled out numerous changes. New student orientation is now more focused on the rigors of law school, after a survey revealed that students weren’t studying enough for classes.

Gone are most of the fun orientation activities, replaced by instruction on things like how to properly brief a case. UDC Law also administers a diagnostic test early on to help identify students who need additional academic support.