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Successful applicants for admission to our undergraduate law programmes possess the
following qualities, and the admissions process as a whole is designed to
identify which applicants possess them in the greatest measure:
Application: motivation and capacity for sustained and intense
work;
Reasoning ability: ability to analyse and solve problems using
logical and critical approaches, ability to draw fine distinctions, ability to
separate the relevant from the irrelevant, capacity for accurate and critical
observation, capacity for sustained and cogent argument, creativity and
flexibility of thought and lateral thinking;
Communication: willingness and ability to express ideas clearly
and effectively; ability to listen; ability to give considered responses.
Throughout the admissions process, tutors will be seeking to detect the
candidate's future potential as a law student. Existing achievement (as
revealed in official examinations, predicted examination results, and school
reports), as well as performance in the written test and interview, is relied
upon mainly as evidence of future potential.
In the case of applicants whose first language is not English, competence in
the English language is also a criterion of admission. In the case of applicants
for admission to the Law with Law Studies in Europe programme, competence in the
European language applicable to the year of study abroad is also a criterion of
admission.
Existing knowledge of the law is not a criterion of admission.
For
more on admissions standards, visit our undergraduate
admissions FAQs...
Want
to take our undergraduate law degree as a second (postgraduate)
degree? Additional admissions criteria and different admissions
procedures apply. Check here
...
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