A Batchelor of Arts (Ba) is a university degree that will take 3-4 years of undergraduate study - that is after you leave school at 18.
You do not need a BA and a BS, just one or the other. That is 4 years, the JD is normally 3 and the LLB is typically about 2 years.
This is dependent on the specific school if you are transferring, and they will have a limit. If the same school, then I would imagine you would need from one to two years. However, this is something you really need to ask the school you are going to attend. They will be the only source for accurate information in the case.
4 years in law school after completing a BA, taking the LSAT, and passing Bar exam.
To become a lawyer you need to attend college 4 years for BA, take the LSAT test, and then go to law school for 4 more years.
High school credits don't matter here. You need to go to a university and have a BA/BS to apply to ANY medical school. Forget high school. It is the college that counts and that you have 4 years completed.
In the United States of America: High school degree 4 years College degree (BA or BS) 4 years Medical school degree (MD or DO) 4 years Residency in Pediatrics 3 years
no
BA plus 4 years law school.
A BA degree in journalism, media or communications is about four years. While earning your degree, you can also work in television to gain more experience, meet new connections, and pay the bills while you're in school.
No, not if your credit hours from you AA are accepted at the college you want to finish your BA at. I know someone that had a AA in Business and went two more years for the BA in Teacher Education. They told her as long as the credits are accepted you are fine, no matter what the field.
If you are asking about a medical doctor it is 12+ years. For a PhD it is 4-5 years for a BA/BS, 2 for a MA/MS and 3-7 years to complete a PhD.
A BS/BA degree (4 years) and 4 years medical school plus another 2 to train as a pediatric doctor. Total about 12 years of college.