ANSWERS: 1
  • The probability of attaining your law degree in less than 4 years is possible. If you're straight out of high school with an equivalent academic certificate to the GCSE (General Certificate of Secondary Examination), the GCE (General Certificate of Examination) the IB (Internationale Baccalaureate) ... et al, you likelihood of acceptance through such programmes is increased, only that you'd also need to prove and establish your maturity and ability to handle the demands of the course work. Many countries school leavers' certificates and/or diplomas are accepted with conditions, usually requiring your immersion into the select British universities Pre-Law course programmes which lasts no more than a mere duration of 6 months. You may apply to the younger universities of Britain, who are dubbed 'the New Ivies,' eg Buckingham University who offer a fast-track less than 2 years LLB Honours Programme. Kindly be prepared though with the reality that the newer universities require more modules per semester. The University of London, avails a graduate-level entry which is also a 2 years duration LLB degree course programme.The condition of entry for this Law Programme though is, the requirement for the prospective student's attainment of an upper-level degree for acceptance ie Level I or a Level II from an accredited university through this particular option. Then there is the BCL availed through the Oxford University, which is a 2 years long (post-graduate/ Master's) law degree programme solely for prospective students of the programme who do not hold law-related and full-law first degrees. All these less than 4 years law programme do not include studying to qualify to become a practicing Solicitor or Barrister.

Copyright 2023, Wired Ivy, LLC

Answerbag | Terms of Service | Privacy Policy