‘My 10 point plan for SQE reform’

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By Thom Brooks on

21

Thom Brooks, professor of law and government at Durham University, puts forward his recommendations for overhauling the SQE

Thom Brooks speaking at LegalEdCon 2025

Legal Cheek invited me to speak at its first LegalEdCon in 2018 on a panel about the SRA’s planned SQE. While it seemed certain to be launched, there was some uncertainty about when exactly that might happen and the impact it might have on law schools and beyond.

Drawing a comparison with the big political debate at the time, I remarked that the SQE sounded a lot like Brexit in some curious ways. First, there did not seem to be widespread calls for a new super exam before plans for a SQE were first proposed.

Secondly, the SQE was presented as a means to solve many big challenges. For example, the first LegalEdCon heard that it might make qualifying cheaper and improve the quality of the newly qualified while improving access to, and diversity within, the profession.

There were other similarities. For instance, it was unclear exactly how the new exam would operate and achieve its lofty goals. We were told at the time ‘Brexit means Brexit’. Likewise, it seemed the SQE meant SQE. The date for when this would happen seemed to move further into the distance. All the while there were concerns raised that the promised benefits might not materialize.

After Brexit came in 2020, the SQE followed soon after in 2021. However, it’s unclear that the SQE has delivered as promised since its freedom day.

Take for example the claim that the SQE would enable better access and transparency, including different SQE provider exam results, which would help drive provider performance, improve student choice and keep costs down. However, since its launch and despite repeated reassurances to the contrary, the SRA has yet to publish pass-rate data for SQE training providers and the affordability, design and quality of the exam itself, an issue rightly flagged by the Legal Services Board.

The available data that I have seen is disappointing. While the pass rate rose to 56% in January, it had fallen to 44% last July. This doesn’t sound great where half or most failing to pass – and still no indication of what a ‘good’ pass rate might look like.

The attainment gap is worse. 50% of white students sit the SQE1 and 70% pass it. 25% of black students sit the SQE1 and 37% pass. This is true at SQE2 too (where the pass rate is over 80% overall): white 84%, black 51%. There is also a gap between independent school educated (70-72%) versus non-selective state school (58%). And some passed even when told they failed, as happened to 175 people last year.

Depending on the preparation course used, some, like the Legal Action Group, claim the SQE has not resulted in significantly reducing costs.

The SQE has happened (and so too Brexit). I’ve been concerned about the SQE from the start and see many of the worries that I and others raised materialising. But as I told LegalEdCon 2025, I don’t think it helpful or productive seven years later to point fingers nor reopen the debate over whether to retain the SQE.

Instead, continuing the Brexit analogy, I argue it is time for a reset with meaningful conversation about how we might the SQE better where various stakeholders work more closely together to get it right.

My 10 point plan for SQE reform:

First, the SRA should consider creating a SQE Advisory Panel. Members might include the recently qualified via the SQE, senior law firm figures and, yes, law professors. (I do not usually make recommendations that I would not personally support delivering.) This Panel can help close the gap between the test takers, test makers and practice to provide an important independent feedback loop on processes and test design beyond anonymous surveys of test takers.

Secondly, the SQE content for exams one and two should be re-examined. Where is law and tech? This is rapidly transforming the sector in ways already profound and will move forward with significant consequences. There should also be a review of what is assessed in each part.

Thirdly, there should be a review into whether an exemption of at least some parts might be advisable and practicable for law graduates. We already know high performing law graduates pass the SQE anyway – and as high as 80% for those with a first class degree. If there were possible, it could widen access further, cut costs and even make sense.

Fourthly, the SRA should consider providing greater financial support for test takers. This might include increasing exam fee discounts that might benefit more relevant individuals. There is no magic money tree for sure, but if support were available it would be widely welcomed. Income received from exam candidates was 21% higher than originally budgeted in 2023/24 reaching £36.7m. This is expected to rise up to £66m for 2024-25 nearly doubling in a year.

Fifthly, there should be more test centres available in the North. While there are various locations for SQE1, there is only Birmingham, Cardiff and Manchester for SQE2. Why not Leeds, York or Newcastle?

Sixthly, there should be a review of reasonable adjustment options for neurodiverse and disabled students. This should include reviewing study resources.

Seventhly, we need greater transparency on the data. This means repeatedly promised and long overdue performance data linked to providers. No more delays. This would benefit from a view of target pass ranges. When is it too high or low?

Eighthly, it would be helpful if data was provided on SQE success and careers. Does smashing the SQE mean a smashing successful career?

Ninthly, this to be published data should be linked to a strategic plan to improve it. Since its introduction, we’ve seen an attainment gap. We know the numbers. So, what’s the plan to improve the outcomes? The SQE’s promise all along is we’d have more data at hand to better guide fixing problems like this. We see the issues. We need to see a plan to fix them.

Finally, there needs to be a more constructive and open engagement with educationalists, providers and the wider legal sector about how we improve the SQE. We all want better access with robust standards. Point scoring is beyond the point.

In conclusion, no one should pretend the SQE is beyond criticism when even the SRA admits there have been ‘teething problems’. At the same time, I don’t think anyone who wants the best for our sector to be satisfied pointing out concerns but not solutions.

My ten point plan for SQE reform is intended to provide some constructive ideas about how some improvements might be supported. It’s time for us all to work together for a common purpose and I hope a reset will be considered.

Thom Brooks is professor of law and government at Durham University.

21 Comments

Simples

A 3 point plan for the SQE:

1) Scrap it
2) Apologise
3) Promise not to let wokery drive examinations in the future.

Guest

The biggest issue by far (having just sat the SQE) is the lack of transparency around the content of these exams – an extremely vague/broadly-worded syllabus, plus a total lack of past papers (the ‘sample questions’ are practically useless), means law schools are essentially just guessing at what content could actually come up.

Trainee

Absolutely this. Having taken and passed both sets of exams in the past year, this is the issue students are most frustrated with. Particularly for SQE1, where questions often focus on very specific points of law/practice.

The fact that this issue isn’t even touched on in this 10-point plan leads me to believe that Professor Brooks is also somewhat detached from the true shortcomings of the system he is proposing to reform. Some of these proposals are very broad brush.

realist

Just scrap it. There was nothing wrong with having a TC as a barrier to become a solicitor. If you couldn’t get one then, no firm is going to suddenly take you on as an associate just because you passed the SQE and have “two years qualifying work experience”.

Anonymous

I agree with this. The SQE’s policy objective is this regard is rather weird given how broad the QWE can be to admitted and identify as a solicitor.

It would make more sense to follow practices in other jurisdictions of having subsets of “qualified” lawyer (e.g. private practice and in-house; government and non-government) that guides the regulator’s supervisory framework. Creating a monolith of what a solicitor is isn’t helpful to the profession as the standards and expectations are quite diverse based on the organisation at which a solicitor works. In any case the law firm or organisation will be the gatekeeper anyway. The legal profession is just expensive and stressful to enter – and people should be made very aware of this.

The FCA’s model of authorisation and supervision is also helpful as a comparator (it’s far from a perfect system but it is highly tailored).

CILEX achieves this in some way but the admission and supervision of CILEX lawyers should be transferred to the SRA for consistency. There should be one regulator for legal professionals.

SRA in need of some TLC

The SRA has too much dignity and will never scrap the SQE – they are too far gone. That ship sailed a long time ago. The only way they will succumb to the pressure is if the Legal Services Board tells them to. Without this legitimate pressure, they will not budge. No wonder the current CEO, Paul Philip, is resigning; the creator of the SQE, Julie Brannan, resigned shortly after its introduction; the SRA doesn’t post past rates for each provider – the writing is clearly written on the wall.

Gertrude

Although early days, I can say that we are starting to see people being offered Associate roles in City law firms, who have qualified via the SQE route (without the traditional 2 year TC path).

Typically these are people who have joined a firm as a paralegal, have impressed, and then qualified after sitting the SQE with the support of the firm.

This is happening more and more.

realist

And this is different to a paralegal being offered a TC and doing the LPC how exactly?

It’s a very significant amount of pain for everyone else to benefit a vanishingly small minority of people, who would have done the LPC/TC anyway with the support of their firm.

It’s hardly fair to crucify everyone else to save these outliers a few years.

Gertrude

It is different as we now have paralegals who are able to qualify separately from a traditional Training Contract.

I have seen many people over the years who are completely capable of being solicitors, but just couldn’t get a TC. The barrier to entry should not be the responsibility of law firms. People now have a way of qualifying independently.

My previous point though, was that people are using the SQE route to qualify. Firms are now using the option more than you might realise. As firms increasingly see this as a viable option, we will see more of it.

We are also completely forgetting that previously thousands of people paid to study the LPC, just for the opportunity to get a TC. This “LPC gamble” as the SRA termed it, has now been removed.

Nahnahnah

A handful of potential beneficiaries does not justify the wider harm being done.

Anon

Thanks for this information. The real problem is the level of downvoting you will inevitably get on your post. The disbelief & distrust from current lawyers for anyone who qualified through a new process. On the one hand, you lot believe that the SQE is difficult to pass, and on the other you will not embrace the conclusion that someone getting through the system, is deservedly employable. SRA did what they did several years ago; what has the industry done to catch up with it?

realist

“On the one hand, you lot believe that the SQE is difficult to pass, and on the other you will not embrace the conclusion that someone getting through the system, is deservedly employable”

It is hard to pass because it tests an absurd range of knowledge, to very granular detail, in a format (absolute best answer questions) that does not lend itself well to law.

It does not tell me someone is employable. If I was hiring for say an employment associate, I would not care about their performance in Wills and the Administration of Estates, nor would I care about how well they performed in Criminal Law and Practice. They are totally redundant on whether you are employable to me.

SQE sceptic

In my large city firm, where we take circa 40 NQs a year, there have been exactly 2 SQE qualified paralegals get an NQ role. Not the most ringing endorsement.

BravingTheSQE

I am sitting in July and it is not as bad as people say but the one big caveat is that I am sponsored.

I can dedicate 12+ hours a day to it and it is fine. I know that I will pass comfortably in July.

The real injustice is that the exact people it was designed to help just get screwed.

I could not pass comfortably whilst working.

Legaleagle4378

I agree with everything you’ve said except for it not being as bad as people say. In terms of the workload at least. I’m also a sponsored student but I (and pretty much all of the other sponsored students on my course) have found it very tough going in terms of course demands and the sheer volume of information that needs to be learnt in preparation for the exams in July. Although I can only hope that the exam itself is not as bad as people say!

Tee Bad

The SQE hasn’t really helped many experienced foreign qualified lawyers who did not go through the traditional training contract route. Most law firms don’t consider them to be good enough just because they haven’t done a TC. This is a key issue that must be addressed.

Anonymous

Slightly confused

Anonymous

Slightly confused by his 3rd point plan reform.
Namely, does this exemption mean such high performing students can be exempt from parts of the SQE? A student with a strong 2:1 from Oxford is without question more high performing than a first class law student from the University of West London. Also not sure how exempting the better students increases access.

Oxbridge

In a sense, if you attended Oxford, you have better access to resources, that being fellow lecturers who are esteemed in their area of study; your own peers who are extremely smart; support from the university itself, who go out of its way to accommodate students.

So, if you *did* attend Oxford – you’d be expected to get a First compared to people who attend the University of West London, because they don’t have access to those esteemed lecturers, and aren’t surrounded by extremely smart people

Response from a January 25 SQE1 and May 25 SQE2 sitter

1) This is a good idea but pointless when the SRA does not take feedback onboard except for administrative issues. They already conduct a focus group and pester us for months after finishing the exam to provide our feedback, yet the only meaningful change has been the introduction of the seat reservation form. Which was to give the SRA credit a well designed change.

2) I don’t feel comfortable commenting on this because the author has not provided enough details on what legal tech he is referring to. I will say the systems used during the exams is completely at odds with how a newly qualified solicitor will actually act with the limited technology provided. Maybe we can start with Kaplan implementing a working spell check function.

3) This seems like a good idea but falls apart on scrutiny. An exemption from the SQE2 would not work because they examine completely different aspects to what a law degree (or any degree) does.

I also would not have wanted an exemption from the SQE1 as a first class law graduate if I then had to sit SQE2. It is very difficult to pass SQE2 without the legal knowledge you get from SQE1. Also a QLD does not teach most of the content examined on SQE1 either so they would only be getting an exemption from the aspects not examined by the prep course anyway. I doubt this would meaningfully affect costs for either the students or Kaplan (regardless of whether the exam fees paid is close to the costs suffered by the SRA and Kaplan) and they would be studying the same content anyway on the prep course for SQE2 at the very least.

Also, the reality is not all Universities are equal, a situation where a student with a 2:1 from OxBridge does not get an exemption but someone who scraped a 1st from another University feels wrong and is going to be extremely difficult to defend.

4) Agreed. Back to my previous point there is no way the costs of the exams are in any way related to the actual costs suffered conducting the exam. The SRA should also stop wasting money like preparing the exams in Welsh for no-one to sit it.

5) Agreed. They also need to be more varied in the South. London’s test centres are all within a 15 minute drive of each other. Its a lesser scale than the North’s issues but West London and South London should both have a test centre.

6) I don’t know enough about this to comment

7,8,9) Agreed. Everyone knows it has not been published because it would shatter the SRA’s claims of accessibility, when the number of people not paying ridiculous sums for a prep course are not passing.

10) Agreed

Anonymous

1. The Brexit analogy is biased and suspiciously politically charged.
2. There is no place for racial equality or politics in law exams and merit measurement.
3. Passing the exams is the minimum standard for a lawyer, it doesn’t guarantee career success. We don’t all have lawyers as parents. And not passing the exams is a way to filter out the entitled trainees from the serious profession in a perilous age.

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