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We're the only national bar review provider that publishes pass rates every year. Take a minute and check out our students' success on their bar exams.
Our successful approach embraces the best practices in online education pedagogy. Five years and counting. Looking for references? We've got thousands. Most of them are practicing attorneys now.
Take classes around your schedule, not ours. And with great teachers like Pamela Karlan, John Jeffries, and Sherman Clark.
Included with all Themis Bar Review courses, this robust question-based learning tool uses dynamic visuals and active-learning methods to help you master difficult legal principles and successfully analyze fact patterns on the Multistate Bar Exam (MBE).
Daily task schedule from day one of your studies up to the bar exam. Need to take a few days off? No problem. Directed study will adapt to work around your schedule to keep you on track.
So you can brush up on your favorite topics. (Or least favorite as the case may be)
Works around your schedule and on your devices. On the web or for your iPad or Android tablet, plus e-reader outlines. Watch a short demo about these course features!
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You’ll receive personalized essay grading from one, dedicated attorney. By tracking patterns in your writing and evaluating your progress, your essay grader will work with you to target your weaknesses and hone your writing skills.
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The Indiana Bar Exam is a two-day bar exam. The first day (Tuesday) consists of two Multistate Performance Tests (MPTs) and six Indiana essay questions. The second day (Wednesday) is the Multistate Bar Examination (MBE). It consists of 100 MBE multiple-choice questions in the morning session, and 100 MBE multiple-choice questions in the afternoon session.
The Indiana Essay exam consists of six 40-minute essays testing the following areas: Administrative Law; Business Organizations; Family Law; Federal and State Personal Income Tax, Corporate Tax, and Estate and Gift Tax; Indiana Constitutional Law; Indiana Employment Law, including wage payment and wage claim statutes; Indiana Debt Collection, including garnishment, attachment, and bankruptcy exemptions; Residential Landlord-Tenant Law; Indiana Pleading and Practice, including statutes of limitation and the Indiana Tort Claims Act; Secured Transactions; and Wills, Trusts, and Estates. The essay questions will be unlabeled, may not necessarily be limited to one subject, and, unless requiring the application of federal tax law, will call for answers based on the law of Indiana. Each essay is graded on a six-point scale.
The MPT consists of two 90-minute items that are designed to assess the examinee’s ability to use fundamental lawyering skills in a realistic situation. Each examinee receives a “File” of source documents and a “Library” of cases, statutes, and rules. The MPT is a “closed universe” component in that it provides all necessary materials to answer the question and does not require the applicant to use any state-specific law.
The MBE consists of 200 multiple-choice questions that test the following areas: Civil Procedure, Constitutional Law, Contracts & Sales, Criminal Law & Procedure, Evidence, Real Property, and Torts. Of the 200 questions, 175 are scored questions and 25 are unscored pre-test questions. The pre-test questions are indistinguishable from the scored questions so applicants are advised to answer all questions.
My constant dialogue with the Themis staff helped me avoid feeling overwhelmed and optimized my study time. Without the personalized support, quick response time and such a flexible/adaptable program, I would've been in heaps of trouble. I still cannot fathom why anyone would pay double or triple for an inferior product. Thanks Themis!