I thought there were too many lawyers won’t this make it worse? I mean how many more lawyer posters do we need on this site? Supreme Court: Bar exam will no longer be required to become attorney in Washington State The bar exam will no longer be required to become a lawyer in Washington, the state Supreme Court ruled in a pair of orders Friday. There will be three experiential learning alternatives to the bar exam, each for people following a different path of legal study. The specifics, scale and implementation plan for the pathways have yet to be developed. These changes are in addition to Washington adopting the new National Conference of Bar Examiners’ NextGen bar exam, which focuses more on practice and real-world skills. That exam will be implemented in summer 2026. The court also lowered the minimum passing score for the bar exam from 270 to 266, a reduction previously made during the COVID-19 pandemic. Also: Article on the lawyer “bubble”. Law Schools Are Building Another Giant Lawyer Bubble Destined To Burst In The Legal Job Market - Above the Law
Seems dumb. Probably raise the barrier to entry for teachers. Just to be on a dumb roll. Should consider cutting med school enrollment while they're at it.
It's going to decimate research clerks, legal assistants and the like way more than it will hurt trial lawyers. Who it will hurt are the guys churning traffic violations and such
There is nothing magical about the bar exam. And it often is just another financial barrier. Go to law school for three years at exorbitant cost then immediately drop a few more grand into a study program so that you can actually pass the bar. "Reading the law" in most states is also not a real path. In Virginia you had to essentially do a full-time unpaid internship with a willing lawyer for years. If I could do that I would probably not bother, seems pretty burdensome for someone who clearly doesn't have to work for a living. Everyone I knew in law school passed the bar, including the absolute slack jaws. It isn't as if the bar was keeping morons out. Although some did require more than one attempt. I kicked one of them out of our fantasy football league because he couldn't understand the rules and would spend days texting the group his "reasoning." He started in the DA's office in New Mexico (you know, like Saul), moved to private for a bit, and now is with the Army (he is a Navy vet.) Doing just fine as a lawyer, but still struggling to absorb what a dynasty league entails.
“Did you know there are more students in law school than there are lawyers walking the Earth? We're coming out, guns blazing! ….. all of us, acquittal after acquittal after acquittal... “ John Milton
“You can give me an hour alone in a bank Pay all my tickets, wipe the slate blank You could buy me a car, fill up the tank Tell me a boat full of lawyers just sank” Robert Cray
I don’t know a lot about the law and various other lawyerings, but I am sympathetic to the idea that in general many state required credentials hurt industries more than they help them because the costs of erecting barriers to entry tend to outweigh the benefits of ensuring the capability of its practitioners. In fact, often the market does just fine filtering out inferior products. All legal firm partners have a vested interest in maintaining the quality of their employees’ work.
But there is no such measuring stick to protect the public and ensure someone given the privilege to practice law has a basic, core understanding of legal principles. While a law firm can certainly filter who they hire, not all lawyers are employed by law firms. A lawyer can hang the shingle and take on clients, regardless of competence. One might argue that all a lawyer needs to get clients is a good advertising budget. A bar exam provides that base line that needs to be crossed to engage in the practice of law. I think it is dangerous to erase that line.
According to the article there are just different alternatives to be able to practice instead of just passing the bar exam, though they havent yet been established. To me this just sounds like how in some college programs you can do a non-thesis option by doing different things that still require you establish some kind of mastery of the material. It doesnt sound like anyone can just decide they are a lawyer without establishing some kind of competency. Some people just dont do good on tests, and if there are other ways to establish they are competent, I dont see a huge issue with that.
I kind of want a lawyer who was either bright enough or tenacious enough to pass the test. But honestly recommendations is how most people roll selecting lawyers not reviewing their test scores.
Yep. Even Cousin Vinne passed the bar, albeit after six tries. And look at how he prevailed in court.
I might have misconstrued your point but I want individuals I rely on to be certified or licensed. From accountants to surgeons to lawyers. Maybe there should be more uniformity in certifications, but it’s reassuring to know my Uber driver at least has a drivers license. And overall I don’t like how our society seems to be lowering reqmts across the board. for example not enough students pass so make it easier or lower reqmts to get A’s. The same for our work force
Exactly my thoughts. I’d think we’d want our professionals to pass a rigorous vetting to ensure base competence. I took the bar exam (33 years ago). I hated it, but it was necessary. And now it’s necessary for me to take continued education courses every cycle, in every place I am licensed. And that is a good thing, at least in my opinion.
The con man in Catch Me if You Can passed the Louisiana bar exam without going to law school and learned how to be a lawyer by watching TV