Pre-Law

Pre-Law

Pre-Law

Why Study Pre-Law?

The Pre-Law Program provides students with access to a variety of resources, activities, and events that focus on mastering the law school admissions process, preparing for a legal education, and understanding the various career paths in the legal profession. The Pre-Law Program of Wheaton College will help you explore or confirm a calling to the legal profession and prepare you for the intellectual rigors and moral complexities in the study and practice of law.

Why Study Pre-Law at Wheaton?

In recent years, about two dozen Wheaton College graduates have gone on to law school each year. Wheaton College students are regularly accepted at the top ten law schools and other excellent Tier 1 law schools.

For the last seven years, all but one Wheaton senior applying to law school has been accepted to one or more law schools where they applied. Based on the most recent statistics from the Law School Admissions Council, Wheaton seniors, on average, scored almost nine points higher on the LSAT than their national peers, placing them at 84th percentile.

What Will I Learn?

Like most colleges, there is no formal “pre-law” major at Wheaton. Students who are successful in law school have majored in traditional subjects, such as political science, history, English, philosophy, or economics, while others have majored in areas as diverse as art, music, biblical studies, physics, and biology.

Law Courses - Students can explore various facets of the law through several undergraduate law courses in various departments, such as Introduction to Law, Business Law, Constitutional Law, Criminal Procedure, and Philosophy of Law.

Consult the course catalog for full listing of current courses available in this field.

Possible Careers for Pre-Law Students

Employment of lawyers is projected to grow 6 percent from 2014 to 2024, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. The Center for Vocation and Career will be happy to help you explore the career possibilities available for lawyers.

The mechanics of applying to law school involve assembling a mix of objective and subjective criteria.

  • Enroll with the Law School Admission Council (LSAC) and its Credential Assembly Service (CAS).
  • Prepare for and take the Law School Admission Test (LSAT).
  • Submit transcripts to the CAS.
  • Draft a resume and a personal statement.
  • Collect letters of recommendation and have them submitted to the CAS.
  • Complete and submit a law school application.
  • Plan for financing a legal education.

Learning to brief cases [at Wheaton] has been so helpful in making the transition to law school. When everyone was struggling to grasp the concept, I was already in the know. — Jordan Nitz '14
I have such fond memories of constitutional law; I feel like I relive ‘the glory days’ when I give my judiciary lectures in my intro to American politics class. — Katherine Ann (Graham) Francis '09

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