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Advice on flexible JD programs for personal goals and disability - Printable Version +- Online Degrees and CLEP and DSST Exam Prep Discussion (https://www.degreeforum.net/mybb) +-- Forum: Main Category (https://www.degreeforum.net/mybb/Forum-Main-Category) +--- Forum: Graduate School Discussion (https://www.degreeforum.net/mybb/Forum-Graduate-School-Discussion) +---- Forum: Doctorate Degree Discussion (https://www.degreeforum.net/mybb/Forum-Doctorate-Degree-Discussion) +---- Thread: Advice on flexible JD programs for personal goals and disability (/Thread-Advice-on-flexible-JD-programs-for-personal-goals-and-disability) |
RE: Advice on flexible JD programs for personal goals and disability - wow - 09-02-2025 (08-23-2025, 05:15 PM)Juris Wrote: The biggest hurdle for me is proctoring. Remote online proctoring has never worked for me. During COVID I had terrible experiences, even getting flagged for something as basic as drinking water or taking my meds mid exam. It just does not fit with my medical situation. An in person or live proctoring setup at a facility would probably solve it, but then there is the question of whether schools would even allow that and how much it would cost me out of pocket. Missing occasional live sessions is also an issue with my treatments, but the actual study load itself of 20 to 40 hours a week I know I could handle if the structure is clear. I wouldn't rule out schools based on proctoring; I would inquire about ADA waivers. It is not unheard of to get waivers for drink, medication, etc during exams at the undergrad and grad levels if you document the need. I would expect law school to be the same. Depending on the school, they might also be willing to offer some flexibility re: live attendance. Or not. But you don't know if you don't ask. RE: Advice on flexible JD programs for personal goals and disability - Bingbong - 09-02-2025 (08-22-2025, 04:21 AM)Juris Wrote: Hi everyone!!!! NWCU recently increased their fees so you might want to double check that. If you are open to taking the baby bar after the first year, you can consider other Calbar registered school like https://americaninstituteoflaw.com/ and https://lawdegree.com/ which work out to be cheaper than NWCU. I was contemplating American institute, but I don’t want to sit the baby bar. RE: Advice on flexible JD programs for personal goals and disability - Juris - 09-04-2025 Thanks for all this. Now I’m looking for advice on affordable online or distance LLB programs that I can take mostly self-paced. I already have a bachelor’s degree in a non-law field, and my goal is to earn a recognized law degree that could later qualify me for an LLM in the U.S. Ideally, the program would allow some transfer credits to help me finish faster and be asynchronous so I can study at my own pace. I’ve come across a few options: UVEG in Mexico, which is very cheap, competency-based, and flexible with credit transfers; UNISA in South Africa, which is internationally recognized but less flexible with transfers; and the University of London Senior Status LLB, which is highly recognized but more expensive. I’m curious if there are any other low-cost, fully online LLB programs that are recognized internationally, whether anyone has successfully transferred credits to accelerate completion, and any tips on maximizing transfer credit or choosing a program that will be accepted for a U.S. LLM. Any personal experiences or recommendations would be greatly appreciated! RE: Advice on flexible JD programs for personal goals and disability - HogwartsSchool - 09-05-2025 (09-04-2025, 08:53 PM)Juris Wrote: Thanks for all this. Now I’m looking for advice on affordable online or distance LLB programs that I can take mostly self-paced. I already have a bachelor’s degree in a non-law field, and my goal is to earn a recognized law degree that could later qualify me for an LLM in the U.S. Ideally, the program would allow some transfer credits to help me finish faster and be asynchronous so I can study at my own pace. I’ve come across a few options: UVEG in Mexico, which is very cheap, competency-based, and flexible with credit transfers; UNISA in South Africa, which is internationally recognized but less flexible with transfers; and the University of London Senior Status LLB, which is highly recognized but more expensive. I’m curious if there are any other low-cost, fully online LLB programs that are recognized internationally, whether anyone has successfully transferred credits to accelerate completion, and any tips on maximizing transfer credit or choosing a program that will be accepted for a U.S. LLM. Any personal experiences or recommendations would be greatly appreciated! You want U.S. LLM to practice law in the US? Is that the end goal? RE: Advice on flexible JD programs for personal goals and disability - Juris - 09-05-2025 You want U.S. LLM to practice law in the US? Is that the end goal? ________________________________________________________________________________________ Yeah, my end goal isn’t to do the full JD here. I’m really aiming for an LLM in the U.S. more as an academic milestone, though I’d like to keep the CA/NY bar option open if the degree path lines up. A three- or four-year JD in the States just isn’t realistic for me with the cost and time involved. For context, I already have a few bachelor’s degrees outside of law and an RA-accredited MBA. Most of my work has been in compliance and legal support, so I’ve got decent practical exposure, but no formal law degree yet. I’ve been comparing a few LLB routes:
RE: Advice on flexible JD programs for personal goals and disability - SteveFoerster - 09-05-2025 (09-05-2025, 05:17 AM)Juris Wrote: Has anyone here gone the Top-Up LLB route to shorten things? https://chestnuteducationgroup.net/university-of-central-lancashire/bachelor-of-laws-llb-hons-top-up#content[/list]Since you haven't studied law otherwise, it doesn't look like you'd be eligible for this one. RE: Advice on flexible JD programs for personal goals and disability - wow - 09-05-2025 (09-05-2025, 05:17 AM)Juris Wrote: Do you have a link to the UVEG program? I wanted to read about it, but seem to be looking only in the wrong places on the site. re: UNISA, feedback on the sister board is that it's not really designed for international students. If I remember correctly, one person on the sister board got into a graduate program there (I don't remember if they completed it) and others have tried but ran into too much red tape or technical difficulties. RE: Advice on flexible JD programs for personal goals and disability - Jonathan Whatley - 09-05-2025 (09-04-2025, 08:53 PM)Juris Wrote: Ideally, the program would allow some transfer credits to help me finish faster and be asynchronous so I can study at my own pace. […] Transfer credits from where? A law degree that qualifies future lawyers will consist entirely or almost entirely of courses offered at a law school and specific to training future lawyers. Transfering credit into a law school is almost exclusively used by students to change from one law school to another midstream. Changing law schools midstream is unlikely to accelerate your time to completion. There’s a fairly high chance it would slow your time to completion as some credits from your Law School A would misalign with your Law School B. RE: Advice on flexible JD programs for personal goals and disability - HogwartsSchool - 09-05-2025 (09-05-2025, 05:17 AM)Juris Wrote: You want U.S. LLM to practice law in the US? Is that the end goal? 1. Are you going to live in CA/NY even if you qualified to take the bar exam and passed? 2. If you just want an LLM, why don't you get one (LLM) from the UK, it would be far cheaper? 3. An US LLM isn't cheap either, so, if your budget is only $4K all-in, then, unsure how you will be able to afford a US LLM. 4. Do you know what area of law you want an LLM in? RE: Advice on flexible JD programs for personal goals and disability - Jonathan Whatley - 09-05-2025 (09-05-2025, 02:34 PM)HogwartsSchool Wrote: 4. Do you know what area of law you want an LLM in? A candidate with a foreign first degree in law seeking to apply in the US typically takes not just any LLM, but rather an LLM designed for that purpose surveying key areas of US law. It’s often titled something like an LLM in American Legal Studies. |