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Is it true that some university law faculties prefer traditional A-levels?

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Is it true that some university law faculties prefer traditional A-levels?

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There isn’t a prescriptive A-level choice for aspiring lawyers as there is for medics, for instance. But law is a very academic degree and often universities will look more favourably at candidates who have ­undertaken ‘traditional’ A-levels that are perceived to be more ‘academic’, such as English Literature, History, Maths, Sciences and Languages. You ­certainly don’t need an A-level in law to study it as a degree.

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