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Kuwentong Peyups — Bar Exams in the time of COVID-19 pandemic

by Atty. Dennis Gorecho

Bar Exams in the time of COVID-19 pandemic

 

Prayers will not save you in the bar exams.

 

“Do not write a mantra, motto, prayer to deities or saints, special plea addressed to the examiner or the Bar Chairperson, or any other such extraneous text,” Supreme Court Associate Justice Marvic Leonen, the Bar exam chairperson, said.

 

Leonen stressed that leaving or making any distinguishing mark in any submitted answer is classified as cheating and can disqualify the examinee from the whole Bar Examinations.

 

In reality, many aspiring lawyers become more religious during this time, praying hard that they will see their names in the list of successful examinees.

 

Due to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, the bar examinees for this coming bar have reviewed for longer than all the other batches taking the bar exams under very difficult conditions.

 

Finally, they will take the 2020/2021 bar exams on February 4 and February 6 after being postponed several times. It was first postponed from November 2020 to November 2021.

 

The duration of the 2020-2021 Bar examinations is also shortened from its traditional four consecutive Sundays to only two days.

 

Previous bar exams were held for four Sundays with two subjects each at the University of Santo Tomas as the venue.

 

The coverage of the exams is also now reduced from the usual eight subjects to four sets of examinations.

 

The four sets are the following: (1)  Law Pertaining to the State and Its Relationship with Its Citizens (formerly Political Law, Labor Law, and Taxation Law); (2) Criminal Law; (3) Law Pertaining to Private Personal and Commercial Relations (formerly Civil Law and Commercial Law); and, (4) Procedure and Professional Ethics (formerly Remedial Law, Legal Ethics, and Practical Exercises).

 

For the first time, the exam will be held in multiple sites.

 

“These changes pro hac vice seek to meet the demand for new lawyers amid the disasters plaguing the country. The Philippines has produced no new lawyer since the pandemic. But while the bar examinations may no longer be postponed, it can be held in a way that is more humane. With these changes, the Court strikes that balance,” the SC said.

All examinees were advised to strictly undergo quarantine.

 

With excitement and trepidation, we pursued the dream of becoming  lawyers.

 

Traversing the path of legal education was hard to the exponential power.

 

We immersed ourselves in law books and cases, faced terror professors, pored through volumes and pages of SCRAs, lined up for photocopying at the law library, hurried through classes, reviewed and crammed through lessons, and survived recitations.

 

Encounters with law professors during the dreaded recitations involved answers that range from direct lifting from the SCRAs “in the original” for those who studied, to inventions through guess work for those who didn’t.

 

Despite the torture, most of the memorable moments in law school were funny blunders during class recitations.

 

Passing the bar exam is obviously not that easy and seems to be the crowning glory of a student’s life.

 

The bar exam is considered one of the toughest and most difficult among the professional board exams, having one of the highest mortality rate.

 

Passing is obviously not that easy. The discipline in terms of time management and patience is crucial during the review period.

 

It is also a yearly spectacle on the performance of law schools measured on the most number of topnotchers or those scoring the highest passing rate.

 

I belong to the working student program of UP Law as a reporter for the TODAY broadsheet and other international news agencies. I do my coverage during the day then attend my evening classes. I read my cases in the bus on the way home to Las Piñas from Diliman, always looking for the seat with the strongest headlight.

 

I was among the lucky 1,465 examinees who passed, or 39.63 percent out of the 3,697 examinees of the 1998 bar exams, which is considered as one of the highest in bar exam history.

 

One has to gain an average of 75 percent with no subject falling below 50 percent, otherwise he will be disqualified.

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