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Start dates: Deadlines if you are applying to Oxford: Interviews: 9-11th December Decisions are sent out in late December or early January.
UCAS course codes:
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Here are some frequently asked questions about admission to study the undergraduate law course in Oxford with Senior Status. Before reading them, please remember that you should always check the Undergraduate Prospectus for authoritative information on current admissions procedures. The information set out below applies to the two year Senior Status Law course. That course is open only to applicants who already have an undergraduate degree, or who will have obtained such a degree by the time they intend to begin the Oxford law course. Note that, at Oxford, first degrees in Law (including the two year Senior Status course) are taught at the undergraduate level, in contrast to the position in some other countries (e.g. the United States) where first degrees in Law are always graduate degrees. It is important to note that an applicant who already has an undergraduate degree, or will have obtained such a degree by the time they intend to begin the Oxford law course, may choose not to apply for the two year Senior Status Law course, and can instead choose to apply for either the three year Law course or one of the four year Law with Law Studies in Europe courses. For information on other courses see: Please note that, whether applying for the two year, three year, or four year courses, applicants with a degree must send their degree transcript to the college considering their application.
1. If I want to do an undergraduate law degree at Oxford, who do I apply to? Second, if you would rather choose a specific college, it is very important to note that not all colleges consider applications for the two year Senior Status Law course. A list of colleges that do consider such applications is maintained by the University and is available below. There is still a good deal of choice available. For example, in 2008, nine colleges considered Senior Status applicants. It is important to note that Harris Manchester College does not consider applications from those who wish to complete the two year Senior Status course. However, in some years, it may consider Senior Status applications from applicants who wish to complete the Law course in seven terms (i.e. in two years plus one term). For more information, see Question 14 below. If you have a chance to visit Oxford, colleges will be happy for you to look around; college web-sites will also have details of specific Open Days, when tutors will be on hand to answer questions. However, there is no need to worry if you can’t visit before making an application. The best way to choose is to read about the colleges in their own words, and in the words of their current students. Each college has a web-site and a prospectus. Some will also have an “Alternative Prospectus” produced by students; in addition, there is a University-wide Alternative Prospectus produced by the Oxford University Student Union. First, your application will first be considered by the college to which you apply – or, if you make an open application, by the college to which your application is allocated. That college may select you for interview, in which case it will continue to consider your application, and, at the end of the interview period, will make a decision as to whether to offer you a place. Alternatively, it may be that the college does not select you for interview (this may happen, for example, if that college has received a large number of excellent applications). Your application will then be considered by a Law Faculty committee. The committee is made up of Faculty members who are also college law tutors. This committee may then decide that your application, assessed against the general field of applications to all colleges, is worth further consideration. In that case, you will be called for interview at a different college that considers Senior Status applications. This pre-interview re-allocation process aims to ensure that, as far as possible, strong candidates are selected for interview, no matter which college first considered their applications. The co-operation between colleges does not end there. If you are invited for interview at a particular college, it may also be the case that, once that college has interviewed you, you will be offered a further interview at another college that considers Senior Status applications. That college may then consider your application and make a decision as to whether to offer you a place. This form of re-allocation, taking place during the interview process, aims to ensure that, as far as possible, the best candidates are offered places, no matter which college first interviewed them. 5. Can I apply for deferred entry? For the purposes of deciding whether to invite deferred-entry applicants for interview and whether to offer them a place, the colleges and the Law Faculty will rank them against all the other current applicants, not only against the other deferred-entry candidates.
The costs of accommodation and food are also payable by you, whether you are a UK, EU, or Overseas student. College rents and catering charges vary. There are also options for living out of college. Oxford works out as no more expensive than other popular UK student cities.
8. Are there any bursaries and scholarships?
You need to fill in the online Universities and Colleges Admissions Service (UCAS) form. The UCAS form is all that is needed: there is no additional Oxford form. 10. Do I need to fill in separate application forms for accommodation? You are also required to send your degree transcripts to the college you have applied to, or if you have made an Open Application, to the University Undergraduate Admissions Office. Interviews are in December. Decisions are sent out in late December or early January. If you receive a conditional offer your place will either be confirmed or denied when your results are available. It is important to note that the two year Senior Status Law course is a particularly demanding course, as subjects are studied at a quicker pace than on the three year Law course or the four year Law with Law Studies in Europe courses. As a result, colleges generally require that successful applicants for the two year Senior Status Law course will normally have achieved (or be predicted to have achieved before starting their Oxford course) a first class degree or equivalent. Where a candidate for the two year Senior Status course has not recently been pursuing formal academic qualifications, colleges will generally require strong and convincing evidence, at an equivalent level to a first class degree, of the candidate’s achievements and future promise. In some years, Harris Manchester College is able to offer Senior Status places to study for the undergraduate Law degree in two years plus one term. For example, in some years, it may be possible for Harris Manchester to make an offer, to a candidate applying in December, to begin their studies at Oxford in the following March or April (i.e. at the start of the following Trinity Term). In this way, it is possible for candidates offered such a place to complete the course in seven terms, studying subjects at the same pace as undergraduates on the three year Law course and four year Law with Law Studies in Europe courses. As a result, the academic criteria applied to candidates for this seven term Senior Status course may not be so strict as those applied to candidates for the standard two year Senior Status course. It is important to note that: (i) no college other than Harris Manchester College currently offers places for the seven term Senior Status course; and (ii) in some years, Harris Manchester is unable to offer places on the seven term Senior Status course. So, if you are interested in this seven term course, please contact Harris Manchester College before making your application (link below).
15. What if I do not yet have any pre-existing academic qualifications, such as GCSEs or equivalents? We do accept applications from candidates who have not yet obtained any certified academic qualifications. However, in order to give your application fair consideration, we do require some evidence of your academic achievements to date. When assessing applications for the two year Senior Status course by candidates who have not recently been pursuing formal academic qualifications, colleges will generally require strong and convincing evidence, at an equivalent level to a first class degree, of the candidate’s achievements and future promise. So, if you do not have any certified examination results, it is very important to include on your UCAS form detailed information on your academic achievements. It will also be helpful if your referee can give a detailed account of your academic achievement. All graduate applicants are required to send their degree transcripts to the college to which they have applied (if making an Open Application, you must send such transcripts to the University Undergraduate Admissions Office). All applicants for any of the Oxford undergraduate law degrees are required to sit the LNAT. It is your responsibility to register for and sit the LNAT before Oxford’s deadline of 1 November. If you fail to sit the LNAT test by that deadline, your application will be incomplete. It is your responsibility as an applicant (not anyone else’s) to check the LNAT consortium website for deadlines and instructions as to how to register and sit the test. This applies to UK, EU and overseas applicants: there are LNAT test centres all over the world. If there is no test centre in your country, or no safe transport route to a test centre, you must contact the Oxford college to which you are applying for further instructions.
18. Why does Oxford hold interviews? It is important to note that we do not interview all applicants. For those being interviewed, interviews are time-consuming and demanding. In addition, we prefer to focus our interviewing efforts on candidates with a reasonable chance of success. As a result, we only interview those who have a realistic chance of being offered a place, judged by their UCAS forms (including their existing academic record) and LNAT scores. This short-listing process means that some of our applicants are turned down without being invited for interview. If a candidate is short-listed, and so invited for interview, we will make reasonable efforts to arrange an interview. In some cases, however, candidates from overseas may have to be considered without interview.
A useful way to see what an Oxford undergraduate law interview is like is to watch a mock interview: a video can be downloaded for free from the Oxford University iTunes store (go to http://podcasts.ox.ac.uk/) or seen at http://podcasts.ox.ac.uk/?feed=law-general-video-feed#law-general-video-feed. If you come to a particular college for interview in Oxford, you are very likely to receive two interviews at that college. In 2009, those interviews will take place over Wednesday 9th and Thursday 10th December. It may then be the case that, as part of our re-allocation process (see Question 4 above), you will also be interviewed by a second college: if so, that interview will take place on Friday 11th December. 20. Will you look at samples of my school or college work? No. When you complete the LNAT test, you will write a short essay: this will be read by us when evaluating your application.
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