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The BA in Law with Senior Status is a shortened
version of our regular law degree available only to those who already
have at least one other university degree. The grant of Senior Status
is in the discretion of the admitting college. The
effect of it is that the student is exempt from the first public
examinations, and from the first year of residence in Oxford.
The
first public examinations in law, unlike those is many other subjects,
are
taken two-thirds of the way through the first year. This means that
law undergraduates start studying subjects for their final public examinations
in the final term of their first year. A Senior Status BA student therefore has one
term fewer than other BA students to cover the full body
of work for his or her final public examinations. He or she
also misses the first
summer vacation, which is used by undergraduates to consolidate their
work. Experience has shown that only postgraduate students of a very high
academic calibre can cope with this successfully.
As a result,
colleges that consider accepting postgraduate applicants with Senior Status for
Oxford's BA programmes in law generally apply stricter academic criteria to those
applicants than they do to
undergraduate applicants who wish to study for the same programmes over their
full durations. Successful Senior Status applicants will normally be predicted to
achieve or have achieved a first
class degree or equivalent, or, in the case of mature applicants, strong and
convincing evidence of the applicant's achievements and future promise at an
equivalent level. For a full statement of the admissions criteria, follow the
link below.
In addition, some colleges consider Senior Status
applicants who are
able to join the programme one term early (in April/May). This has the effect of enabling such students
to study for their final public examinations at the same pace as undergraduates,
so the criteria for such applicants may not be so
strict.
Senior Status students who wish their
BA to be a 'qualifying law degree' for the purpose of legal
practice in England and Wales need to take criminal law
and constitutional law as their two 'optional' courses in the
final year. The other students will have studied these subjects
for the first public examination and hence will have a free choice
of options at this point.
The Senior Status BA is a tough
programme with little room for manoeuvre and only a limited number
of colleges will admit students to it. With all this in mind,
postgraduate applicants for Oxford's BA programmes should consider very
carefully whether they wish to apply for Senior Status or rather join the
regular undergraduate programme. Please note that, normally, Senior Status
is available only for the regular BA in Law, not for the BA in Law
with Law Studies in Europe. Postgraduate applicants for the latter degree
will normally be expected to study it over the full four years.
Visit
the undergraduate section
of this site to learn more about the BA degree.
Full
statement of admissions criteria
for postgraduates applying to study on our undergraduate degrees.
Special
admissions procedures (note that Senior Status BA applications
are processed through the undergraduate admissions system).
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