California Bar discloses AI was used to develop some questions in problem-plagued February exam

Los Angeles – The California State Bar has revealed that multiple preferred questions were created with the help of artificial intelligence in a problem-trained bar test.

The legal licensing agency said in a press release on Monday that it would ask the California Supreme Court to adjust the test score for those who took the February test.

Los Angeles told the Times the Los Angeles Times, “We are worse than the disappointment in the February 2021 exam,” Mary, a resident of Academic skills at the University of Los Angeles, Academical University of California University. “I am almost silent. It is only incredible to draft the questions used by artificial intelligence by non-laws.”

In February, many test-taking were unable to finish their bar after the new test was directed to complaint. Some applicants also crashed on the online testing platforms before they even started. Others have struggled to finish and save articles, experienced screen lags and error messages and could not copy and paste the text, the Times was reported before.

According to the latest presentation of the State Bar, the multiple-choice questions of the score of 5 were coupled and 5 first-year law students were taken from the exam. The State Bar’s Psychometrician ACS Ventures created a small subset of 23 score questions and developed with artificial intelligence.

“Our (multiple-choice questions) are valid for the legal skills of our (multiple-choice questions),” Leia Wilson, executive director of the state bar, told the newspaper in a statement.

“This is a wonderful admission,” Katie Muran, an associate professor at the San Francisco School of Law University, who specialized in the bar examination, told the newspaper.

“The State Bar has admitted that they have appointed a company to use a non-lawn AI to draft the questions given in the actual bar tests,” he said. “Then they paid the same company to the same company for the examination -audit questions and finally approval, including the organization’s written questions.”

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