The pass fail is way better, hope this change occurs after 2012
What's wrong with a scored exam... or "much better" about the current setup? As it stands now, we just have a pass/fail test that routinely results in basically any student who applied themself (ie is not in bottom 15-20% academically) passing. That does very little to help residencies sort the good candidates, and it's not very challenging for most students either.
If the exam was scored, you'd see a lot more study effort - even from top students (since they would probably attempt to score at/above the level other top students if they want elite residencies). Not to say current pass/fail NBPME is a joke, but if you're in the top half/third of your class (depending on school), you can basically treat pt1 as a low pressure chance to caaasually review your basic science info. A change to scored exam would make even high ranked students work harder IMO (ever seen MD/DO students studying for USMLE or COMLEX?). That change to a scored exam
greatly benefits every student to be studying their butt off on anat, pharm, pathology, etc before they are going to start 3rd year clinics and have the responsibility of making patient diagnosis/treatment decisions very soon.
It would also help residency programs have something besides GPA to go off of when ranking clerk/residency candidates. The more factors they have to judge their candidates by... interview, gpa, clerkship performance, board score, research, ECs, etc, the more they can take out the factor of "luck" (high gpa inflated by school grading system, nearly failed board exam that was still a "pass" in the P/F system, BS-ed CV with fake research or ECs, interview topic that an ordinary candidate happened to know a ton about - or get tipped off about by a classmate who interviewed previously - and appear brilliant, etc). It's never bad to give the programs more info about the candidates they are making a big decision about in terms of salary, time investment, malpractice risk, co-resident chemistry, etc etc.
Furthermore, it would benefit the pod schools to know what courses/areas they may wish to find better faculty/methods for. Certain schools may also realize they are far behind the avg NBPME scores of other programs, and maybe that would be a wake up call that they should not be accepting/passing/graduating the sort of students they currently do. That could lead to more overall incoming/graduating pod program selectivity, which can only benefit us all in terms of long term respect for DPMs.