
97% got it wrong! Granted, it's a super-obscure rule that runs contrary to most of what we've learned about damages.
I got a 13/21 as well. Why is everyone extremely upset with a 13? 62% is not end of the world...dabigchina wrote:hoping these were hard questions, because i only got 13/21 too.Lawworld19 wrote:jcwest wrote:How'd you do on them? I only got 14/21.Lawworld19 wrote:http://www.ncbex.org/pdfviewer/?file=%2 ... ument%2F17
Just did these sample 21 questions directly from NCBE website. Not sure if any of you don't know about it but can get them done in 38 mins.
I only got a 13/21. Yikes.
The fact patterns seem easier to get through but some of the concepts I just didn't off the top of my head know if that makes sense.
LawIsLyfe33 wrote:I got a 13/21 as well. Why is everyone extremely upset with a 13? 62% is not end of the world...dabigchina wrote:hoping these were hard questions, because i only got 13/21 too.Lawworld19 wrote:jcwest wrote:How'd you do on them? I only got 14/21.Lawworld19 wrote:http://www.ncbex.org/pdfviewer/?file=%2 ... ument%2F17
Just did these sample 21 questions directly from NCBE website. Not sure if any of you don't know about it but can get them done in 38 mins.
I only got a 13/21. Yikes.
The fact patterns seem easier to get through but some of the concepts I just didn't off the top of my head know if that makes sense.
Yeah what the hell were these answers. That, and newsworthy? They made no sense, at least reference a specific rule!! Are these official questions from old exams?dabigchina wrote:Yeah... I didn't get that either. I'm not even sure what doctrine it's under. Estoppel?jcwest wrote:18 really pissed me off. I analyzed every step from divisible portions of the contract, to goods vs. service, to SoF.... and the answer is fair and equitable? Apparently I have to go over contracts more.Lawworld19 wrote:jcwest wrote:How'd you do on them? I only got 14/21.Lawworld19 wrote:http://www.ncbex.org/pdfviewer/?file=%2 ... ument%2F17
Just did these sample 21 questions directly from NCBE website. Not sure if any of you don't know about it but can get them done in 38 mins.
I only got a 13/21. Yikes.
The fact patterns seem easier to get through but some of the concepts I just didn't off the top of my head know if that makes sense.
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62% is failing in my jurisdiction, so...LawIsLyfe33 wrote:I got a 13/21 as well. Why is everyone extremely upset with a 13? 62% is not end of the world...dabigchina wrote:hoping these were hard questions, because i only got 13/21 too.Lawworld19 wrote:jcwest wrote:How'd you do on them? I only got 14/21.Lawworld19 wrote:http://www.ncbex.org/pdfviewer/?file=%2 ... ument%2F17
Just did these sample 21 questions directly from NCBE website. Not sure if any of you don't know about it but can get them done in 38 mins.
I only got a 13/21. Yikes.
The fact patterns seem easier to get through but some of the concepts I just didn't off the top of my head know if that makes sense.
Because there's enough evidence that the father could plausibly have a successful self-defense defense, the judge should give the instruction and let the jury decide if the father has successfully proven the defense.xhe02 wrote:Can someone explain why the answer is B? Thanks!
Thanks! Do you know why C is not correct? I thought for self-defense, the danger has to be imminent. Does the father's mistake of fact justify his self-defense?EncyclopediaOrange wrote:Because there's enough evidence that the father could plausibly have a successful self-defense defense, the judge should give the instruction and let the jury decide if the father has successfully proven the defense.xhe02 wrote:Can someone explain why the answer is B? Thanks!
I think it's just an evidentiary issue. Because a jury could find that the father believed he was in imminent harm (because of the past abuse and the son knocking the door down) the instruction should be given to let the jury decide the weight of the evidence.xhe02 wrote:Thanks! Do you know why C is not correct? I thought for self-defense, the danger has to be imminent. Does the father's mistake of fact justify his self-defense?EncyclopediaOrange wrote:Because there's enough evidence that the father could plausibly have a successful self-defense defense, the judge should give the instruction and let the jury decide if the father has successfully proven the defense.xhe02 wrote:Can someone explain why the answer is B? Thanks!
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Sadly, it is in mine too. I need a 133 on the MBE to get half my points.dabigchina wrote:62% is failing in my jurisdiction, so...
You have a lot of time to fix your issues before the test.Lawworld19 wrote:Just did the first 25. Got 14 out of 25.
Not good. I prob am going to have to retake in Feb.
Mixed sets I get 64-70 usually.
I feel you. But hanging there. I am very much the same.Lawworld19 wrote:Just did the first 25. Got 14 out of 25.
Not good. I prob am going to have to retake in Feb.
Mixed sets I get 64-70 usually.
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deacon wrote:I feel you. But hanging there. I am very much the same.Lawworld19 wrote:Just did the first 25. Got 14 out of 25.
Not good. I prob am going to have to retake in Feb.
Mixed sets I get 64-70 usually.
Do you think newer questions are different than ones in Themis?
Yes, I am. I am an international lawyer from a civil law country. Only took contracts and torts in my LLM. It has been damn hard to learn all these new subjects. I am not super hopeful, but trying to do as much as I canLawworld19 wrote:deacon wrote:I feel you. But hanging there. I am very much the same.Lawworld19 wrote:Just did the first 25. Got 14 out of 25.
Not good. I prob am going to have to retake in Feb.
Mixed sets I get 64-70 usually.
Do you think newer questions are different than ones in Themis?
Idk really, somewhat similar, I think the answer choices seemed a little harder to differentiate maybe. We will see, I only did 25 so far.
Are you a first time taker?
Thank you!emwallen wrote:right--its whether or not his belief that harm was imminent was reasonable, not whether harm was actually imminent. based on his history with his son, a jury could probably find he reasonably feared imminent harm. if they had no such history, he would probably have an imperfect self defense argument-- unreasonable but honestly held belief.
But is it per se failing or just being on track to fail? There are lots of points to be had on the MPT and writing coherent, even if wrong, answers on the MEE.jcwest wrote:Sadly, it is in mine too. I need a 133 on the MBE to get half my points.dabigchina wrote:62% is failing in my jurisdiction, so...
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Thanks a lot!EncyclopediaOrange wrote:I think it's just an evidentiary issue. Because a jury could find that the father believed he was in imminent harm (because of the past abuse and the son knocking the door down) the instruction should be given to let the jury decide the weight of the evidence.xhe02 wrote:Thanks! Do you know why C is not correct? I thought for self-defense, the danger has to be imminent. Does the father's mistake of fact justify his self-defense?EncyclopediaOrange wrote:Because there's enough evidence that the father could plausibly have a successful self-defense defense, the judge should give the instruction and let the jury decide if the father has successfully proven the defense.xhe02 wrote:Can someone explain why the answer is B? Thanks!
I'm in CA. I have no confidence in my ability to write significantly above average answers on the essay portion.EncyclopediaOrange wrote:But is it per se failing or just being on track to fail? There are lots of points to be had on the MPT and writing coherent, even if wrong, answers on the MEE.jcwest wrote:Sadly, it is in mine too. I need a 133 on the MBE to get half my points.dabigchina wrote:62% is failing in my jurisdiction, so...
dabigchina wrote:I'm in CA. I have no confidence in my ability to write significantly above average answers on the essay portion.EncyclopediaOrange wrote:But is it per se failing or just being on track to fail? There are lots of points to be had on the MPT and writing coherent, even if wrong, answers on the MEE.jcwest wrote:Sadly, it is in mine too. I need a 133 on the MBE to get half my points.dabigchina wrote:62% is failing in my jurisdiction, so...
Yikes sorrydabigchina wrote: I'm in CA. I have no confidence in my ability to write significantly above average answers on the essay portion.
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