No. It is a bachelor's degree with the appropriate prerequisite coursework required by law schools.
Yes, you need at least a bachelor's or master's degree in anything pertaining to criminal justice and law. A certificate from law school is required as well.
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.
No a master's degree is not required. You need a bachelor's degree for most schools.
Law school will take three years to obtain the juris doctor (JD) degree.
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.
A law degree is called a JD, or Juris Doctor. Any bachelors degree will suffice as a pre-req to admission to law school.
He has a Juris Doctor (J.D.) degree in law.
4 year college (Bachelors Degree) the Law School.
Usually to become a lawyer the formal requirements that are needed include a 4-year college degree, 3 years of law school, and passing a written bar examination. Law school applicants must have a bachelor's degree to qualify for admission.
Law school usually takes 3 years.
Law school is usually a graduate program (master's degree). If you are doing an undergraduate program (i.e. you just left high school, don't have any other degrees, and are going for a bachelors degree), then yes, you can major in English and then go on to a graduate school to study law. * Yes, almost any undergraduate degree is acceptable including an English major. However, it would could be beneficial for the prospective law student to also take courses related to the legal field perhaps a minor in criminal justice, civil rights, constitutional law, etc. A law degree is a doctorate degree (Juris Doctorate) not a Master's.
The law degree in the US is a juris doctor (JD). This takes three years of law school to complete post bachelor's degree.The law degree in the US is a juris doctor (JD). This takes three years of law school to complete post bachelor's degree.The law degree in the US is a juris doctor (JD). This takes three years of law school to complete post bachelor's degree.The law degree in the US is a juris doctor (JD). This takes three years of law school to complete post bachelor's degree.The law degree in the US is a juris doctor (JD). This takes three years of law school to complete post bachelor's degree.The law degree in the US is a juris doctor (JD). This takes three years of law school to complete post bachelor's degree.