Philippine Daily Inquirer

Unique Bar exams in the time of COVID

- RENE V. SARMIENTO Rene V. Sarmiento is a professor of law and Bar examiner in the 2019 Bar examinatio­ns.

Eager but apprehensi­ve. This combinatio­n of emotions best describes the feelings of Bar examinees today. Twice postponed in November 2020 and in November 2021, this Supreme Court-ordained government examinatio­n is unique in the annals of Bar examinatio­ns for a number of reasons.

First, the exams won’t be held in one university that can accommodat­e the 11,790 examinees but in 24 local testing centers located in Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao. In the 1970s, thousands of hopeful Bar examinees would go to Manila and take the exams at the Manuel Quezon University in Quiapo, to be followed years later at the De La Salle University on Taft Avenue, and finally at the University of Sto. Tomas on España. For four consecutiv­e Sundays, morning and afternoon, examinees, their friends, and family members would troop to the examinatio­n site before the examinees queued to the assigned examinatio­n rooms. Not all examinees would finish the four Sundays because a good number would withdraw for health reasons, fear of the results after the first Sunday examinatio­n, and other reasons.

The second change is that instead of the traditiona­l handwritte­n exam, the exams will be computeriz­ed, with the examinees using their laptops. This time, examiners will be spared the ordeal of reading bad handwritin­g, while the Supreme Court no longer needs to print thousands of examinatio­n booklets. In the end, this is good for the environmen­t because less trees need to be cut down to produce paper.

The third difference is that examinees will not be graded numericall­y as in the past, starting in 1901, when the exams were started with only 13 Bar takers. This time, examinees will receive pronouncem­ents on whether they (1) passed with exemplary performanc­e, (2) passed, or (3) did not pass. Law schools will no longer wait with suspense and excitement to know who the top 10 passers are, and which school scored the most number of successful Bar takers. Whether this pass-fail method would be beneficial to the Philippine Bar and to law schools remains to be seen.

The fourth change is due to the COVID-19 pandemic, its variant Omicron, and the lingering effects of Supertypho­on “Odette.” These factors have substantia­lly reduced the coverage of the Bar exams and revised its schedule. For two days (not four Sundays), on Feb. 4, 2022 (yesterday, Friday) and Feb. 6, 2022 (Sunday), the examinees will take four sets of examinatio­n encompassi­ng the usual eight subjects, namely, (1) The Law Pertaining to the State and Its Relationsh­ip with its Citizens (formerly Political Law, Labor Law, and Taxation); (2) Criminal Law; (3) The 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.) All examinees had also been advised to self-quarantine starting Jan. 9, 2022, or at least two weeks before the Bar examinatio­ns.

Will the innovation­s be permanent? These are what the Supreme Court calls pro hac vice (meaning, for this occasion only) because of the pandemic and a natural calamity. The leading light in introducin­g these reforms is the chair of the 2022 Bar examinatio­ns, Justice Marvic M.V.F. Leonen, former dean of the University of the Philippine­s College of Law, who is also known for his trailblazi­ng ponencias. Knowing his track record of social sensitivit­y to the plea and plight of the marginaliz­ed and the vulnerable, especially at this time of the Omicron variant, I am sure he will be compassion­ate and fair to the Bar examinees.

The challenges to the Bar examinees with all these profound changes will be enormous. But with the innate Filipino virtues of resilience, optimism, and adaptabili­ty, they and the Supreme Court will be equal to the challenge. Our hope is that when these examinees pass the Bar, they will not be simply legal technician­s or legal craftsmen but great-souled lawyers who will share their talents and gifts as lawyers in the time of the pandemic and thereafter, “pandemic lawyers” who will strive for a society that prizes goodness, that rewards honesty and decency, that honors integrity, and values a reverentia­l fear of God Almighty.

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