http://ipkitten.blogspot.com/2020/02/gantry-gate-have-your-say-in-mercer.html
In an effort to respond to the criticism levelled at P6/FD4, CIPA recently launched a review of patent attorney education and training in general, “The Mercer Review”. The review is chaired by retired patent attorney and former EPI president, Chris Mercer. The Mercer Review is currently seeking comments from CIPA members, with a deadline of Valentine’s Day 2020 (details of how to submit your comments are provided below).
Gantry-Gate and the launch of the Mercer Review
Last year was a new low point for P6/FD4. The PEB was forced to reduce the pass mark of P6/FD4 2018 in view of an usually low pass rate, a process the PEB termed “borderlining”. Even with the lowered pass mark, only 33.8% of candidates passed the paper.
Gantries, 2018 |
The review, christened the “Mercer Review of Training, Education and Assessment”, was launched in December. CIPA members have been requested to submit their opinions to the Mercer Review by the 14 February 2020. The address for submitting responses is [email protected]. The review is being chaired by Chris Mercer (Carpmaels and Ransford LLP). Details of the motivation behind the review can be read in January’s edition of the CIPA journal. CIPA asks some very general questions, e.g. “Do you have any comments about the current knowledge, understanding and practice covered by the Final Diploma examination”. Respondents are also encouraged to raised their own questions.
When beginning his review, Chris Mercer could do worse than taking a look at the IPKat comments (here and here). Readers who commented in March are encouraged to now submit their observations to the Mercer Review. As a starting point, here is a reminder of some of the main issues that were raised in the aftermath of Gantry-Gate.
The Middlesex Report
Many are frustrated that the previous review of patent attorney education, The Middlesex Report, was largely ignored by CIPA and the PEB. This previous and more narrow review identified serious failings in the examination system. Middlesex University was asked to look into the reasons for the low pass rate in the Final Diploma examinations (including P6/FD4). The report produced was damning: “these papers have been criticised for too much reliance on memorising obscure content, lack of relevance to professional work and inconsistent marking schemes”. However, little was done in the wake of the Middlesex Report to address these concerns.
Inadequate training and high fees
The training materials offered by PEB and CIPA are considered by many to be inadequate. The amount of training available to a candidates will be highly dependent on their employer, and whether the employer is prepared to pay for the expensive training courses. The provision of training is complicated by the fact that many patent attorneys who have scraped a pass in P6/FD4 consider themselves an expert in how to pass the exam. This leads to a Chinese whisper effect with respect to the correct exam technique. To this day, there are multiple (and contradictory) schools of thought with regards the “correct” way to approach P6/FD4 (do you construe every word? do you write an inventive step argument for every single claim? should you start writing after half an hour or two hours? how much time should you devote to DoE? do you get penalised for assessing inventive step by the problem-solution as opposed to Windsurfer/Pozzoli approach?).
Connected to the issue of training are the complaints about the ever increasing exam fees. Many firms will not pay for candidates to resit exams multiple times, forcing candidates to pay for resits out of their own pocket.
Fit for purpose?
Many commentators argue that P6/FD4 is not fit for purpose. The exam is criticised for not assessing whether a candidate is a competent attorney because of the form of the exam and the subject-matter of the inventions. Furthermore, a large number of European Qualified attorneys with many years of experience are none-the-less persistently incapable of passing P6/FD4.
Chris Mercer |
The subject matter of P6/FD4 is always a mechanical invention. The examination has therefore often been criticised for favouring candidates who work in the mechanical field. Data provided by CIPA (from the Middlesex Report), purportedly showing that pass rates between technical fields was equivalent, were criticised. Quite simply, the sample sizes for these data was too small to draw any meaningful conclusions. In any case, one of the issues with the 2018 Gantries paper was undoubtedly the difficulty many candidates had in understanding the subject matter [Merpel is still not clear that she properly understands what a gantry is…]. One suggestion for preventing such an issue happening again in the future is for the papers to be stress-tested by recently qualified candidates from different technical backgrounds.
With regards to the relevance of the exam, there can be no doubt that an attorney who spends their entire professional life dealing with, for example, pharmaceutical or software inventions will find P6/FD4 largely irrelevant to their daily practice. This, in combination with the low pass rate, means that P6/FD4 isolates swathes of the profession. The risk of the CIPA qualification increasing in irrelevant is heightened by the fact that many attorneys in the pharma and biotech field primarily (if not exclusively) interact with the EPO as opposed to the UK IPO. Many European Qualified candidates in these technical fields who repeatedly fail the UK exams probably begin to ask themselves why they even need the UK qualification.
Switch to a university style exam ?
Some have suggested that the Final Diploma could be replaced with a university course. However, others argue that a university style examination would not necessarily solve the problem that the exams are not fit for purpose. The PEB papers are at least drafted by patent attorneys. A university professor of IP would have limited, if any, experience of drafting, prosecuting or of carrying out a infringement and validity opinion. A university, it is argued, would therefore not be in the best position to judge fitness for practice. On the other hand, a university could of course employ patent attorneys to run the course and set the exam. The difference from the Diploma would be that training would be consistent. Another alternative to the 5 hour closed-book P6/FD4 exam would be for the assessment of infringement and validity to take the form of coursework.
An inadequate appeal process
Should a candidate be unsatisfied with their mark in an examination, PEB offers an appeal process: the “Enquiry about results (EaR) policy”. However, this process is expensive and appears to require Examiners to take only a cursory review of candidates paper. There are three stages to the review process. Crucially, at no point in this process does the candidate receive a copy of their marked exam script. (It is none-the-less possible to obtain a copy of your exam paper using a Freedom of Information (FOI) request. Such requests can be revealing, particularly with regards to the different marks awarded by different examiners for the same paper.)
At Stage One of the EoR, a candidate may pay ~£120 to have PEB check that they have counted up the candidates marks correctly. In other words, £120 for the Examiner to check that the number of ticks on the paper correspond to the final mark. Crucially, candidates are only informed if there is a change in their mark if that change makes the difference between a pass and fail.
At Stage Two, a candidate may pay a further ~£400 for a PEB examiner who was not involved in the original marking of the candidate’s paper to review their paper. The outcome from this review is often far from satisfactory. From a number of anonymous sources, this Kat has seen Stage Two reviews that consist of no more than a short paragraph containing typos and general statements such as “Marking scheme ultimately applied fairly by examiners”.
At Stage Three, a candidate may pay a further £500 to check whether the procedure in marking and the EoR has been followed correctly. In other words, Stage Three does not involve any further assessment of the candidate’s answer.
The appeal process for the UK exams can be compared to that which is available to EQE candidates. A dissatisfied candidate can file (an admittedly expensive) appeal to the Disciplinary Appeal Board. They can then argue their case at oral proceedings, and receive a fully reasoned and written decision by a body independent from the Examination Board (see for example: IPKat: EQEs – don’t speculate beyond the content of the paper (D 11/18)).
Have your say
IPKat understands that the problems with P6/FD4 is an emotive issue. The Mercer Review is hopefully an attempt by CIPA to acknowledge that there is a problem. The Review also attempts to address the issue of patent attorney education more broadly. Let’s take this opportunity to provide constructive feedback and suggestions to CIPA, in the hope that CIPA are prepared to consider meaningful reform. Send your comments to [email protected]. Those who wish to submit comments anonymously may also contact the CIPA Informals: [email protected]. The Informals have offered to collate submissions.
Finally, here is one of this Kat’s favourite comments from last year, provided by IPKat reader “Ron”. Ron takes us on a tour of “P6 through the ages”, reminding us that the problems with P6/FD4 go back a long way. Over to Ron:
“Since retiring, examinations are now only of academic interest: however, I have some sympathy with P6 candidates, having passed on my 11th attempt! I sat the very first P6 exam (the one where candidates were supplied with actual examples of the prior art paper clips etc.) and got 47%. I found that my paper clip exhibited no barbing action whatsoever, and noted the fact in my script; however I later heard through the grapevine that anyone not considering that the paper clip exhibited barbing action, would not pass. On testing various paper clips in the office, while some did exhibit a definite barbing action, others did not. Ironically, it is possible that, had I had a “barbing” paper clip (as the examiner presumably did), I might well have passed on my first attempt.
In subsequent years my P6 marks exhibited an almost perfect negative correlation between my increasing experience in real-life infringement and validity issues and my P6 marks. Part of my problem lay with the fact that my trainers taught the techniques they had successfully used when they had qualified, and fashions had changed.
One always used the “Table” method, where the answer could consist mainly of a table. Another used the method of breaking long claims into lettered sub-paragraphs for easier referencing of features. The year I tried this, examiners’ comments said that this approach was calculated to annoy the examiner. Another year a fellow I was working with who had set and marked several of the pre-JEB I&V papers corresponding to P6, gave me a tutorial. His approach, which was indeed used by our Inns Of Court counsel, was to identify 5 or 6 key features and concentrate on them, only briefly addressing the minor points. I think I got 19% that year.
Then there was the oil seal question with its physically-impossible Escher-like drawings, one side of one figure showing upstanding ridges, the other side showing recessed valleys, with the lines depicting the peaks of the ridges of one side mysteriously turning into the valleys of the other side. I don’t think the examiners liked my comment that the omnibus claim (covering the invention as shown in that figure of the drawings) couldn’t possibly be infringed as it related to something that it was impossible to construct. That year my supervising attorney did complain to the JEB, but it transpired that the exam scripts had been destroyed by a secretary who needed the space. At least it did prompt them to institute an appeal procedure, having belatedly realised that none actually existed. The JEB could see nothing wrong with the drawings, which from my viewpoint as a professional engineer well versed in the production and reading of mechanical engineering drawings, was somewhat alarming. I did knock up from Plasticene in 10 minutes the two different configurations and two sets of drawings, one of which depicted what the JEB said was impossible to create using engineering drawing conventions. Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?
Then there was the brick question. The set of drawings in the copy of the question with examiner’s comments that appeared in CIPA, differed from the drawings supplied to candidates, giving rise to doubt as to which set the examiners had based their marking on.
In the mid-1990’s I attended the CIPA panel meeting to discuss P6 with students. The report in CIPA did not mention the disagreement between the panel as to the appropriate form of answer. One said that brief notes were all that was required, whereas another said that such notes should only be the basis for a more fully written-out answer. Attendees were left none the wiser as to what was required.
I passed when tutorials were organised, hosted by those actually doing the marking, so you could find out what style of answer was in fashion that year and give them what they wanted.
Back numbers of CIPA show that there was much criticism of the pre-JEB exams in the 1970’s. Plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose.”
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