The Question Bank

Transcript

Now, as I've mentioned, our main progress page interpolate MBE questions, they're called these comprehension checks. So these are actual MBE questions.

But there will come a time when you're ready to take a bunch of MBE questions in succession with the subjects mixed up as if you're taking the actual MBE. And when that time comes, you can do that in our question bank. So here, you'll find a question bank, including all of the MBE questions that the bar examiners have ever released. So that's thousands of them, right? 1,800.

And, you know, you can start with the oldest ones, but I would recommend you do this only if you plan on taking all of them, and really there may not be a need for you to take all of them. So maybe you want to start with aging, or maybe you want to start with, you know, the newest ones, which are the most relevant. The laws do change over time.

Now, there are many ways to sort these questions. You can maybe just focus on crim, right? If you just want to focus on crim, just click that. And even more specifically, you'll see the subtopics, and these little outlying trees that pop up correspond to the actual subject matter outlines, and you can look over here for that.

But, you know, like I said, you might actually want to take these MBE questions all mixed up to simulate an exam, and so to do that, you can see where the exams came from. So, OPE 1, there's OPE 2. So let's say I want to take OPE 1. So you just click this. Now you just get the OPE 1.

So you can see I've already done some of these, not great, but here the icons tell you whether we have an audio explanation, a written explanation, right, a written explanation, or the official NCBE explanation, or some combination thereof. So to start this exam, I'm going to start over here with question 11, which is new to me.

So let's click into it. You'll see on top, it kind of lays out which question you're in. The little timer starts running. You can pause, you can play, you read the question, you, I don't know, maybe it's (A). Let's see. Nope, not (A), but this looks like it's actually a pretty hard question, because a lot of people got it wrong and a very low percentage got it right.

And here it tells you like the topics under torts that this question implicates, and this one does have an audio explanation. If you, you know, if you just want to jump ahead to like (B), for example, you can just click, or (A), you can just click this and then it'll take you right over to where the professor explains Answer Choice (A).

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