JD - Juris Doctor (its the degree from law school) BS - Bachelor of Science - its a degree received from a 4-year college. If you are looking at getting a JD, you would need a BS or BA (Bachelor of Arts) first.
JD stands for Juris Doctor, which is a professional degree in law. BS stands for Bachelor of Science, which is an undergraduate academic degree typically awarded in the sciences or Social Sciences.
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.
West Virginia University, BS; JD; Indiana University, MBA.
Curtis Hill went to Indiana University,Bloomington (BS, JD)
Four years for. BA/BS and usually a JD (3 years of law school.)
Kayleigh McEnany went to Georgetown University (BS)University of MiamiHarvard University (JD)
Education: University of Houston, BS, 1979; South Texas College of Law, JD, 1982.
There are currently two schools in Chicago offering a six-year BA-JD or BS-JD program. Shimer College offers a program in conjunction with Chicago-Kent College of Law. Roosevelt University offers a program in conjunction with the John Marshall Law School.
Jim Jordan went to University of Wisconsin–Madison (BS)Ohio State University (MA)Capital University (JD)
A B.A. is a Bachelor of Arts and a B.S. is a Bachelor of Science. J.D. refers to the Juris Doctor. LL.B. is a Bachlelor of Laws.
If I've understood the question properly, yes. Most Masters programs simply require that applicants have an undergraduate degree; whether that degree is a BA, BS, BSEd, JD, or other 4-year degree doesn't normally matter to any great extent.
Jd Dillard goes by JD.
JD Souther goes by JD.