NC Feb 2017
Posted: Wed Mar 08, 2017 12:22 pm
Did anyone take NC for Feb 2017? Haven't seen any comments on it yet
Curious as to what others thought about the essays
Curious as to what others thought about the essays
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You said you missed July by 12 points ... does anyone know scoring on the NC exam? I think it's out of 500 and you need 350. But how exactly do they calculate that. If 12 points is scaled, does that mean you could have passed if you just got like 2 or 3 more points on the essay?TenaciousJ wrote:I did... missed July by 12 points and had to retake, so now I'm on pins and needles every day waiting on the mailman. lol. Should be here any day now probably since it'll be 4 weeks tomorrow since the exam. Last year's results posted March 30th, but I'm not sure if that means people received them March 30th, or if that was the online posting which is always a few days after individual results are mailed.
Having sat for two, the essays in my opinion were easier this go round (at least they FELT easier) than they were in July.. maybe it was added experience though, who knows. Oddly, I felt that the Prof. Resp. Q was tougher than July, which I didn't expect. The Corp. Q was tougher as well.. less room for discretion in your answer if you didn't actually know the precise rule. That one I felt like I either completely nailed it or totally bombed it, but I doubt there was a lot of gray area.
MBE is 40%, essays are 60%. Essays are scored in a scale of 1-10 (and are supposedly curved).HiOCEAN wrote:You said you missed July by 12 points ... does anyone know scoring on the NC exam? I think it's out of 500 and you need 350. But how exactly do they calculate that. If 12 points is scaled, does that mean you could have passed if you just got like 2 or 3 more points on the essay?TenaciousJ wrote:I did... missed July by 12 points and had to retake, so now I'm on pins and needles every day waiting on the mailman. lol. Should be here any day now probably since it'll be 4 weeks tomorrow since the exam. Last year's results posted March 30th, but I'm not sure if that means people received them March 30th, or if that was the online posting which is always a few days after individual results are mailed.
Having sat for two, the essays in my opinion were easier this go round (at least they FELT easier) than they were in July.. maybe it was added experience though, who knows. Oddly, I felt that the Prof. Resp. Q was tougher than July, which I didn't expect. The Corp. Q was tougher as well.. less room for discretion in your answer if you didn't actually know the precise rule. That one I felt like I either completely nailed it or totally bombed it, but I doubt there was a lot of gray area.
HerptonBurpton wrote:MBE is 40%, essays are 60%. Essays are scored in a scale of 1-10 (and are supposedly curved).HiOCEAN wrote:You said you missed July by 12 points ... does anyone know scoring on the NC exam? I think it's out of 500 and you need 350. But how exactly do they calculate that. If 12 points is scaled, does that mean you could have passed if you just got like 2 or 3 more points on the essay?TenaciousJ wrote:I did... missed July by 12 points and had to retake, so now I'm on pins and needles every day waiting on the mailman. lol. Should be here any day now probably since it'll be 4 weeks tomorrow since the exam. Last year's results posted March 30th, but I'm not sure if that means people received them March 30th, or if that was the online posting which is always a few days after individual results are mailed.
Having sat for two, the essays in my opinion were easier this go round (at least they FELT easier) than they were in July.. maybe it was added experience though, who knows. Oddly, I felt that the Prof. Resp. Q was tougher than July, which I didn't expect. The Corp. Q was tougher as well.. less room for discretion in your answer if you didn't actually know the precise rule. That one I felt like I either completely nailed it or totally bombed it, but I doubt there was a lot of gray area.
I've heard that the raw essay score is multiplied by either 2.5 or 3 (there seems to be some disagreement about the exact multiplier). The essay total is then added to the scaled MBE score. If you end up with 350+, you pass.
DurhamNC2017,DurhamNC2017 wrote:I took Feb. 2017 exam as well. Missed the July 2017 exam by one point. I think the essays were about the same in terms of difficulty between July and Feb., with Feb. maybe being a little harder. I feel like I got lucky in that for several, I just knew the answers to questions cold (e.g. con. law, corp. law, family law, wills) but the civ. pro question, the contracts question and to a lesser extent the property question I thought were somewhat difficult. The other questions were all ok, but not close to perfect or not what I felt was something like a 4 type of answer. From reviewing my essays from July, what I took away was even if you are totally wrong on the law or partially wrong, go through a lawyerly looking analysis in terms of aspects of a certain test, number your point (e.g. i, ii, iii), and come to some sort of conclusion based on something even if its not correct. To the extent that I did that on my essays in July, I generally did better even if I did not know all of the law.
As for timing, I believe that the results last year were mailed on or around March 28, but the exam was a few days later in Feb. last year (23 and 24 in 2016 as opposed to 21 and 22 in 2017), so I'm hoping that they have been mailed or will be mailed soon. I believe that the posting online generally occurs several days after the mailing.
In terms of study tips, I did about 90 or so practice essays and about 900-950 practice MBE and used themis this time around. I used Kaplan previously. I generally felt better prepared and really liked Themis overall. I did more studying in terms of practice problems and essays in Feb. I would suggest trying to max out on the topics you actually like (for me Con law, which is great because its the same on both days, crim pro and crim law) and feel competent in your other subjects but don't worry about getting absolutely everything. Then towards the end try to memorize tests with multiple points. I think the absolute key though is to slowly go through your answers where you got questions right and wrong. This really let things sink for me and I can think of both essay and MBE points I got because of a specific practice problem I got wrong but then really analyzed the law in reviewing my answers.
Good luck to all of those who took the exam and those taking this summer!
spartjdawg wrote:DurhamNC2017,DurhamNC2017 wrote:I took Feb. 2017 exam as well. Missed the July 2017 exam by one point. I think the essays were about the same in terms of difficulty between July and Feb., with Feb. maybe being a little harder. I feel like I got lucky in that for several, I just knew the answers to questions cold (e.g. con. law, corp. law, family law, wills) but the civ. pro question, the contracts question and to a lesser extent the property question I thought were somewhat difficult. The other questions were all ok, but not close to perfect or not what I felt was something like a 4 type of answer. From reviewing my essays from July, what I took away was even if you are totally wrong on the law or partially wrong, go through a lawyerly looking analysis in terms of aspects of a certain test, number your point (e.g. i, ii, iii), and come to some sort of conclusion based on something even if its not correct. To the extent that I did that on my essays in July, I generally did better even if I did not know all of the law.
As for timing, I believe that the results last year were mailed on or around March 28, but the exam was a few days later in Feb. last year (23 and 24 in 2016 as opposed to 21 and 22 in 2017), so I'm hoping that they have been mailed or will be mailed soon. I believe that the posting online generally occurs several days after the mailing.
In terms of study tips, I did about 90 or so practice essays and about 900-950 practice MBE and used themis this time around. I used Kaplan previously. I generally felt better prepared and really liked Themis overall. I did more studying in terms of practice problems and essays in Feb. I would suggest trying to max out on the topics you actually like (for me Con law, which is great because its the same on both days, crim pro and crim law) and feel competent in your other subjects but don't worry about getting absolutely everything. Then towards the end try to memorize tests with multiple points. I think the absolute key though is to slowly go through your answers where you got questions right and wrong. This really let things sink for me and I can think of both essay and MBE points I got because of a specific practice problem I got wrong but then really analyzed the law in reviewing my answers.
Good luck to all of those who took the exam and those taking this summer!
I took the Feb exam too. I'd be very curious as to what a 3 or 4 essay looks like. Any way to convey how/why an essay would be graded a 3 or 4? Similarly, would you estimate that a model answer posted by the NC Bar is a 10?
I think this is precisely why I ask the question. On the test, I know that I missed the corporations rule, part of the family law rule, and part of the civ pro rule. Everything else was pretty decent. Analysis-wise, I think I did a sufficient enough job, but would love some guidance on how these things are graded. Part of me feels that my answers for Torts, Contracts, Con Law, and PR could have been model answers. Another part of me feels like I could have failed with flying colors.HiOCEAN wrote:In my opinion it's not easy to get above a 5 on the essays. They grade pretty harshly. I wouldn't blow the thing off or expect to "make up" law on a number of essays and get a high score.
On the July exam, I got, I believe 3 or 4 essays with a 4, which was my lowest score on any essay. The theme in these essays for me was that I was not very organized, in part because I did not know the answer the question, but I did know parts of the answer and I put those in. From my experience, if you feel like you did an essay perfectly, you probably got an 8 or 9. NC grades hard.spartjdawg wrote:I think this is precisely why I ask the question. On the test, I know that I missed the corporations rule, part of the family law rule, and part of the civ pro rule. Everything else was pretty decent. Analysis-wise, I think I did a sufficient enough job, but would love some guidance on how these things are graded. Part of me feels that my answers for Torts, Contracts, Con Law, and PR could have been model answers. Another part of me feels like I could have failed with flying colors.HiOCEAN wrote:In my opinion it's not easy to get above a 5 on the essays. They grade pretty harshly. I wouldn't blow the thing off or expect to "make up" law on a number of essays and get a high score.
This was incredibly helpful! For the most part, I tried to use headings/subheadings/bullets frequently to call attention to the high level stuff. Hopefully, that translates. Thank you!DurhamNC2017 wrote:On the July exam, I got, I believe 3 or 4 essays with a 4, which was my lowest score on any essay. The theme in these essays for me was that I was not very organized, in part because I did not know the answer the question, but I did know parts of the answer and I put those in. From my experience, if you feel like you did an essay perfectly, you probably got an 8 or 9. NC grades hard.
However, there was one question in July, secured transaction regarding a potential disguised sale that had two parts. I got the first part perfect (I think) and provided all the parts of a secured transaction and did good analysis, but the second part, about priority of lien, I did not answer well. I got a 9 on the essay because I think I had a good approach to the question in terms of ticking through points, etc. So I took from that the fact that you essentially need to make it easy for the grader to give you points by really trying to tick through your tests and elements, which I really tried to do in Feb.
So, I don't think that you can organize your way, without knowing the law, to a good essay score, but you should organize your essay the best you can and try to memorize tests/elements. I hope that helps.
HiOCEAN wrote: You said you missed July by 12 points ... does anyone know scoring on the NC exam? I think it's out of 500 and you need 350. But how exactly do they calculate that. If 12 points is scaled, does that mean you could have passed if you just got like 2 or 3 more points on the essay?
They're definitely looking for specific talking points in an answer that's why the organization is just as important as the actual answer itself. If the grader has to work at finding the answer they're looking for out of what you wrote, you're much less likely to get a point for it even if it's there. That was part of my issue the first go round, my answers were a bit rambling at times unless I had the law down cold and could just formulaically spit out the rule and associate facts to elements. This exam really is an exercise in rote memorization. If you know the rules cold, the issues jump out and the questions are pretty straight forward. If you're unsure, you can still get partial credit certainly but the time spent increases dramatically in my experience which can end up hurting other areas. The corporations question was like that for me this round... I studied corporate law, and reviewed that section of my bar course extensively, but still wasn't sure what rule they were getting at. It actually seemed to me that they were hinting at a rule that didn't actually exist to see if we'd catch that or not. Who knows.HiOCEAN wrote:I'm pretty sure they have a rubric giving a certain number of points for each thing you got right. While you might score 1 point for making up a rule and analyzing it, I found that this didn't net enough points. They are really looking for the specific points. I know some MEE states grade very loosely. I do not believe NC falls into that category. For what it's worth, I heard of someone who got a "1" on one of the essays and still passed. So if you bomb on one of them, you still have hope.
I would not think the model answers are necessarily 10 scores, but they're definitely in the 8-10 range. A 3-4 answer is one that's not organized well, misstates a rule of law and/or analyzes the fact pattern improperly. I think if you give an incorrect rule, but analyze the fact pattern based on the rule you give properly, you may get partial credit for that issue from some graders depending on what other exams they've graded and how yours compares. Missing issues obviously knocks off points, so if there are 3 issues and you only talk about 1, that might knock you down to a 3 or 4 since you missed 2/3 of the available points.spartjdawg wrote:
I took the Feb exam too. I'd be very curious as to what a 3 or 4 essay looks like. Any way to convey how/why an essay would be graded a 3 or 4? Similarly, would you estimate that a model answer posted by the NC Bar is a 10?
It looks like the results were received via mail on March 30, last year, which is 5 weeks from the last day of the test. The equivalent date this year would be next Wednesday, March 29. But who is counting down....hopeful456 wrote:Any guestimates on when we'll receive results? I'm getting increasingly anxious
Hi NC bar takers,TenaciousJ wrote:I would not think the model answers are necessarily 10 scores, but they're definitely in the 8-10 range. A 3-4 answer is one that's not organized well, misstates a rule of law and/or analyzes the fact pattern improperly. I think if you give an incorrect rule, but analyze the fact pattern based on the rule you give properly, you may get partial credit for that issue from some graders depending on what other exams they've graded and how yours compares. Missing issues obviously knocks off points, so if there are 3 issues and you only talk about 1, that might knock you down to a 3 or 4 since you missed 2/3 of the available points.spartjdawg wrote:
I took the Feb exam too. I'd be very curious as to what a 3 or 4 essay looks like. Any way to convey how/why an essay would be graded a 3 or 4? Similarly, would you estimate that a model answer posted by the NC Bar is a 10?
Key thing for me was making sure to use all the facts provided. No words are ever wasted, so if you re-read the fact pattern and notice a stray sentence that you didn't use, then you've probably missed something that you should have discussed, even if to explain why that fact isn't relevant. That was something I didn't do well the first time around, and focused on this time. I felt like it helped to keep that in mind throughout the writing process always looking for things I wasn't using in my answer yet, then I could spot issues I might have otherwise overlooked.
I called them on Friday and they said they hadn't been mailed yet (as of 1pm), but that they would be "soon".ariadne328 wrote:I think there is a decent chance the results will be mailed today, which would mean starting to get them tomorrow or Monday in the triangle area. They say somewhere on the site the letters are mailed on the fifth Friday after the exam, which is today, and that would generally be in line with past years as well. I think last year was a special case because of Good Friday screwing up the normal mail date. I guess we will see soon!
Ugh! But thanks for the update!TenaciousJ wrote:I called them on Friday and they said they hadn't been mailed yet (as of 1pm), but that they would be "soon".ariadne328 wrote:I think there is a decent chance the results will be mailed today, which would mean starting to get them tomorrow or Monday in the triangle area. They say somewhere on the site the letters are mailed on the fifth Friday after the exam, which is today, and that would generally be in line with past years as well. I think last year was a special case because of Good Friday screwing up the normal mail date. I guess we will see soon!