A Times article in 2008 said that “FAMU…has the lowest bar
passage rate, with a little more than half of the students passing.” The
article only mentioned the first-try passage rates. It ignored the fact that
FAMU’s overall passage rate stood between 70 and 81 percent during the years of
2005 through 2007.
The Times consistently left FAMU’s overall bar passage rates
out of its coverage. That’s why many readers were shocked to find out that FAMU
had satisfied the American Bar Association’s (ABA) bar passage rate standard in
2009. The ABA requires a 75 percent overall passage rate and FAMU Law was at 77 percent when it earned full accreditation.
The FAMU interim administration made the wise move of posting
the latest ABA report on FAMU Law on the university website last week at the
same time that it sent out a press release on the issue. When Associated Press
reporter Gary Fineout tried to use the ABA report to paint a distorted picture
of FAMU Law’s bar passage progress, Rattlers already had the full facts.
FAMU’s 2007-2011 overall bar passage rate was 79.04 percent
based upon the data from the ABA site visit. It went up to 82.97 percent after FAMU
submitted updated data after receiving the Florida Bar Exam results from
February and July 2012.
The numbers show that FAMU is doing better than ever in
preparing its students for the Florida Bar Exam. Rattlers have circulated the
report through email list serves and online chat pages. The next step is
for Florida Rattlers to make sure that their elected state House and Senate
members also know the full FAMU Law bar passage rate numbers.
Reporters like Fineout can’t stop FAMUans from knowing the facts and getting the facts out to the lawmakers who make budgetary decisions for the entire state. FAMU should continue to release big reports like the ABA site visit evaluation on its website so Rattlers can spread the truth about the university.