California State Bar Office Of Admissions In Riverside

State:
Multi-State
County:
Riverside
Control #:
US-0001LTR
Format:
Word; 
Rich Text
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Description

This form is a sample letter in Word format covering the subject matter of the title of the form.

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FAQ

Has anyone passed the bar exam in California without completing law school? Yes. California is one of four U.S. states that will allow you to sit for a bar exam without a law degree. In the past five years, 12 people have passed the California bar exam without completing law school.

If your question is not addressed in the above FAQs, please email admissions@calbar.ca or call 213-765-1000 or 415-538-2300. You may also submit a general request in the Applicant Portal.

A 4.0 is considered passing in Uniform Bar Exam jurisdictions that require a 266 to pass. A 4.1 is considered passing in Uniform Bar Exam jurisdictions that require a 273 to pass. A 4.2 is considered passing in Uniform Bar Exam jurisdictions that require a score of 280 to pass.

To pass the exam in the first phase of grading, an applicant must have a total scale score (after one reading) of at least 1390 out of 2000 possible points. Those with total scale scores after one reading below 1350 fail the exam.

If you receive a score at or over 1440, you automatically pass the California bar exam. If, after one reading of your answers, your score is below 1390, you fail the California bar exam. If your score is 1390 or greater but less than 1440, you will get a “second read” by a different set of graders.

For the Office of Admissions to confirm your eligibility to take the California Bar Exam, you must mail an official sealed transcript(s) to the Office of Admissions at 845 S. Figueroa Street, Los Angeles, CA 90017 once you have completed your LLM studies. Please note that electronic transcripts will not be accepted.

The highest score reported on the Uniform Bar Exam (UBE) is typically around 300, which is the maximum possible score. However, scores above 280 are considered exceptionally high and are rare. Individual jurisdictions may also have their own standards for passing scores, often ranging from 260 to 280.

A 295 is a passing score in EVERY jurisdiction.

California Reciprocity California doesn't offer reciprocity but offers a shorter bar exam for attorneys who are admitted in other states and who have been in good standing as an attorney in those states for at least four years prior to their application.

If your question is not addressed in the above FAQs, please email admissions@calbar.ca or call 213-765-1000 or 415-538-2300. You may also submit a general request in the Applicant Portal.

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California State Bar Office Of Admissions In Riverside