MBE Tip of the Day: A Look at a Criminal Law MBE Question
MBE Tip of the Day: Criminal Law
Welcome to our MBE tip of the day series. This “MBE tip of the day” post focuses on a Criminal Law MBE question. Read more
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Welcome to our MBE tip of the day series. This “MBE tip of the day” post focuses on a Criminal Law MBE question. Read more
Many students search for real Civil Procedure MBE questions — that is, Civil Procedure MBE questions that are invented by the National Conference of Bar Examiners. These are the “best” source of MBE questions because they most accurately reflect what you will see on your bar exam. The NCBE writes the exam so NCBE-released questions are the ones you should be practicing with. (For more on that, check out this post on the importance of using real MBE questions.) Read more
Welcome to our MBE tip of the day series. This “MBE tip of the day” post focuses on a criminal procedure MBE question. Read more
If you have been studying diligently for the bar exam, you might be sick of doing and seeing the same questions over and over again. Unfortunately, there are only so many released MBE questions. So if you want to use the “best” MBE questions (those promulgated by the NCBE, the organization that writes the bar exam) your resources are limited.
The good news is, the NCBE recently released new additional MBE questions! And JD Advising offers them! Read more
Welcome to our MBE tip of the day series. This “MBE tip of the day” post focuses on Torts. Read more
Welcome to our MBE tip of the day series. This “MBE tip of the day” post focuses on a Real Property MBE question. Read more
We have helped hundreds of students improve their MBE scores. And many of our students improve their MBE scores significantly—not just by 5 or 10 points but by 20, 30 or more points. Here, we tell you how to improve your MBE score 20 or more points in five steps.
Welcome to our MBE tip of the day series. This MBE post focuses on Civil Procedure.
You will see 25 scored Civil Procedure MBE questions on the Multistate Bar Exam. In this post, we will review a Civil Procedure question together. Note that we have posted several MBE tips (which you can find links to at the bottom of this post) that focus on a specific multiple-choice question that many students answer incorrectly. If you can master these questions, it could increase your MBE score by that many points if you see any of these issues tested again (which, by the way, you will!). These posts of MBE tips and tricks will not only cover substantive law but also strategy. So each post covers one highly-tested area of substantive law as well as an important MBE strategy. You can sign up to receive these posts directly to your inbox for the upcoming administration at the bottom of this page.
The MBE, although administered on almost every bar exam, is not always worth the same amount! Jurisdictions weigh the test differently. In this post, we go over what your MBE score is worth for jurisdictions who reveal their rubric!
Updated: April 2, 2024
Welcome to our MBE tip of the day series. This MBE post focuses on Evidence. Read more
How Many MBE Questions Do I Need to Get Correct?: When preparing for the bar exam, many students get tripped up by the fact that the NCBE scales their MBE score, making it difficult to nail down exactly how many they need to get correct to pass. In this post, we try to answer the question “How many MBE questions do I need to get correct to pass the MBE?” using the information available to us. Read further for more details!
Welcome to our MBE tip of the day series. This post focuses on Constitutional Law. In light of the holiday season, we have a holiday-themed Constitutional Law MBE question. Read more
In this post, we cover the passing MBE score for each state, plus U.S. territories that administer a bar exam. We also tell you about how many questions you should be answering correctly to get that passing score.
Note that the vast majority of states do not have a requisite MBE score. So long as you receive an overall passing score on the bar exam, you will pass! For example, New York requires a 266 to pass the exam. Thus, if you received a score of 133 on the MBE and a score of 133 on the written portion, you would pass. However, you do not need a score of 133 on each. Instead, you could get a score of a 140 on the written portion and a 126 on the MBE and still pass. (There are some exceptions: South Dakota requires a minimum scaled MBE score of 133; and Palau requires a minimum score of a 120.) Generally, however, the majority of states do not have a minimum passing MBE score.
Welcome to our MBE tip of the day series. This post focuses on Contracts and Sales. Read more
Welcome to our MBE tip of the day series. This post focuses on a Real Property MBE question. Read more
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