No, a Master's Degree is not required to get into law school.
Numerous types of undergraduate degrees are acceptable prerequisites to Law School.
An LSAT result is usally needed for admission too.
The LSAT is the Law School Admission Test, and practice exams can be bought in book stores.
While a Master's degree is not a requirement for admission to law school, it is still advantageous. The additional degree will separate you from the vast majority of other applicants and thus provide you a greater opportunity for admission. Another added benefit is that should you ever decide to leave the active practice of law and enter academia, you will have "Dr." status. That is not true for J.D.'s who do not have a Master's. I know.
Education law requires a Masters degree, called a Master of Laws. First one would have to have a law degree, which means an undergraduate degree plus law school, so the Master of Laws is additional schooling.
you need to get a masters degree in criminal justice and if required, a law degree
yes he did
It depends on the specific specialty you want to practice. If you plan of practicing corporate law, then a degree such as a master's in business administration (MBA) might be appropriate, or some type of business related field. If you wish to practice criminal law, then maybe a degree in criminal justice or a related field is an option. Those pursuing a law degree come form a variety of educational backgrounds. Thus, one major will not be of anymore help than another, as long as you complete the appropriate prerequisites required for law school. I do not understand why you are pursuing a masters degree at this point, rather than applying to law school, or working on the prerequisites for law school. Evidently you must have a reason for it. Right? The level of education required for law school is a bachelor's degree, not a master's degree.
The degree awarded upon graduation from law school is a Doctorate of Jurisprudence. Continuing on, you may obtain an LLM, which is a Masters in the Letters of Law.
The ACT will get you into an undergraduate degree program, but not law school. A BA or BS degree (or equivalent) is required before you can apply to law schools in the U.S. The standardized test required for law school admission is the LSAT.
No. It is a bachelor's degree with the appropriate prerequisite coursework required by law schools.
No a master's degree is not required. You need a bachelor's degree for most schools.
Any bachelor's degree is good. There is no specific type required, they like diversity.
Most law schools will require a bachelor's degree. It can be a BS and no particular degree is required.
The Boston University Law School is a graduate program conferring the LLD degree, a doctoral degree. It has not offered a Bachelor's Degree program for many decades. A Bachelor's degree is required to enter the Law School.
The requirements for becoming an IRS tax attorney are a masters of law in taxation. But before you can get a masters you must have bachelor's degree and pass the Law School Admissions Test.