The AI bar exam California scandal is shaking the legal education world to its core. On Monday, the State Bar of California admitted to using artificial intelligence (AI) to help write part of the February 2025 bar exam. The disclosure shocked many. It followed a wave of complaints from test takers about technical issues and poor exam quality. Now, outrage is spreading across law schools throughout the state.
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What the State Bar Revealed
According to the Los Angeles Times, the State Bar’s psychometrician, ACS Ventures, used AI-generated exam questions for 23 of the 171 multiple-choice questions. Kaplan Exam Services developed the remaining questions, while 48 came from first-year law student exams.
The State Bar of California defended its decision, claiming that subject matter experts and content validation panels reviewed all the questions before the exam. However, many educators remain unconvinced.
Law Professors Slam the Use of AI in Legal Testing
Critics across the academic legal world are calling it a bar exam controversy of historic proportions.
“Having the questions drafted by non-lawyers using artificial intelligence is just unbelievable,” said Mary Basick, assistant dean at UC Irvine School of Law.
Katie Moran, an associate professor and bar exam expert at the University of San Francisco, called the move “a staggering admission.” She pointed out that the same company was responsible for both writing and reviewing the AI-assisted questions. This overlap presents a potential conflict of interest that has raised serious concerns.
Bar Exam Tech Failures and Lawsuit Spark Further Scrutiny
Adding fuel to the fire, many February 2025 test takers reported being kicked off the remote testing platform, dealing with screen lags, glitches, and poorly written or confusing questions. These technical failures have now triggered a federal lawsuit against Meazure Learning, the platform responsible for administering the test.
Students weren’t the only ones shocked — even the California Supreme Court claimed it was not informed that AI had been used until the State Bar issued its public press release.
Financial Trouble and Experimental Testing
The State Bar is currently facing a $22 million budget shortfall, which may explain its shift away from the National Conference of Bar Examiners. Instead, the State Bar chose a hybrid model mixing in-person and remote testing. It paid Kaplan $8.25 million to help develop questions — some of which came from unrelated first-year law school exams.
Legal educators argue that those types of questions are not valid measures of the minimum competence required to practice law.
Will the California Bar Fix This AI Testing Crisis?
The Committee of Bar Examiners has a meeting scheduled for May 5 to discuss possible solutions. One proposal includes adjusting scores for those who took the exam in February. Despite the controversy, the State Bar refuses to return to the traditional exam format. Nearly 50% of applicants prefer the remote option, which heavily influences the decision.
Final Verdict: Law and AI Collide in Unprecedented Scandal
This AI bar exam California controversy has put the legal community on high alert. Trust in the California Bar Exam 2025 is now under threat. Many are questioning the use of AI in legal testing. Will this experiment lead to a smarter future? Or will it cause the collapse of standards in one of the most prestigious professions?
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