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Pre-Law

If you plan to one day enter law school, our pre-law program is a great first step.

In this program, you’ll complete the general requirements needed to transfer to a four-year university or college at the junior level and continue your pre-law education toward a law degree. Students who enter law school usually hold a four-year degree in political science, communication, history, business or other related area of study.

Whether you’ve set your sights on becoming a lawyer, or your vision includes other career opportunities, Spokane Community College can start you on the path toward your goals.

Spokane Community College believes that you should graduate with the knowledge, skills, and abilities that further your educational goals, increasing your value in the workforce and contributing to a vibrant community.
 
Our AA-DTA degree program learning outcomes align to our five College-Wide Key Literacies.

Applied Content Literacy
Students will develop knowledge, skills, and abilities in all transfer distribution areas or program elements/areas. Students will build a foundation of information relevant to their program or focus of study while increasing knowledge and competency in their chosen field.

Communication Literacy
Students will develop the ability to create meaning and make connections between themselves and their audience, incorporating awareness of the social nature of communication, including, but not limited to, the impact of ethnicity, age, culture, gender, sexual orientation, and ability on communication styles and results. Students will learn to listen, read, speak, and write effectively using a variety of mediums and modalities.

Information Literacy
Students will develop knowledge and abilities allowing them to identify, locate, and evaluate information pertaining to the problem under consideration. Students will learn how to responsibly research, use, share, and produce accurate, relevant information gleaned through skilled research methods.

Intercultural Literacy
Students will develop an intersectional understanding of modern social realities, which will help enable effective participation and communication in cross-cultural professional, academic, and social settings. This may include, but is not limited to, biological sex, gender identity, socio-economic status, race, sexual orientation, religion, country and culture of origin, and political stance.

Quantitative Literacy
Students will develop and expand the ability to understand numeric information through the gathering, examination, modeling, manipulation, analysis, interpretation, and representation of quantitative and/or scientific data.

Breaking Ground on Your Pathway


Plan Your Courses

Meet with our counselors to customize this plan just for you. You can also search the quarterly schedule for class days and times.

Prepare for College-level Math

Math placement is required for this program. If your math placement is below MATH& 146, you’ll need to take the following sequence of courses, starting from the level you placed into:
AE 48 → MATH 87 → MATH 88 → MATH& 146

Placement

English placement is not required for this program.

Associate in Arts (AA) is the community college degree designed to transfer to most bachelor's of arts degrees at all public and many private Washington four-year institutions. A candidate for the AA-DTA degree must complete 90 quarter credits in academic courses numbered 100 and above with a cumulative grade point average of at least 2.0 and meet specific distribution requirements.

Program Map for

Print/Download

Choose program map:

Total Program Credits: 93


Program Courses

First Quarter

Course ID
Course Title
Credits
BUS& 101
Introduction to Business  
5
ENGL&101
English Composition I  
5
GUID 102
Strategies for Success  
3
MATH&146
Introduction to Statistics  
5
Total Credits
 
18

Second Quarter

Course ID
Course Title
Credits
ENGL&102
Composition II  
5
ENGL&111
Introduction to Literature  
5
 
Lab Science Electives   1
5
Total Credits
 
15
Lab Science Electives: Choose 5 credits Lab Science Electives: Choose 5 credits  
ASTR&101
Intro to Astronomy  
5
ENVS&101
Intro to Env Science  
5
GEOL&101
Intro Physical Geology  
5
PHYS 101
General Physics  
5

Third Quarter

Course ID
Course Title
Credits
FILM 141
Introduction to Film  
5
HIST&137
US History 2  
5
PHIL 110
Introduction to Ethics  
5
Total Credits
 
15

Fourth Quarter

Course ID
Course Title
Credits
 
Foreign Language 1 Electives   2
5
 
Science 1 Electives   3
5
 
Social Science Electives   8
5
Total Credits
 
15
Foreign Language 1 Electives: Choose 5 credits Foreign Language 1 Electives: Choose 5 credits  
ASL& 121
Am Sign Language I  
5
FRCH&121
French I  
5
SPAN&121
Spanish I  
5

Fifth Quarter

Course ID
Course Title
Credits
CMST&220
Public Speaking  
5
 
Foreign Language 2 Electives   4
5
 
Health/PE Group A Electives   5
3
 
Health/PE Group B Electives   6
2
Total Credits
 
15
Foreign Language 2 Electives: Choose 5 credits Foreign Language 2 Electives: Choose 5 credits  
ASL& 122
Am Sign Language II  
5
FRCH&122
French II  
5
SPAN&122
Spanish II  
5

Sixth Quarter

Course ID
Course Title
Credits
 
Any elective course  
5
 
Foreign Language 3 Electives   7
5
 
Science 2 Electives   3
5
Total Credits
 
15
Foreign Language 3 Electives: Choose 5 credits Foreign Language 3 Electives: Choose 5 credits  
ASL& 123
Am Sign Language III  
5
FRCH&123
French III  
5
SPAN&123
Spanish III  
5

Any elective course  

Course ID
Course Title
Credits

Foreign Language 1 Electives   2

Course ID
Course Title
Credits
ASL& 121
Am Sign Language I  
5
FRCH&121
French I  
5
SPAN&121
Spanish I  
5

Foreign Language 2 Electives   4

Course ID
Course Title
Credits
ASL& 122
Am Sign Language II  
5
FRCH&122
French II  
5
SPAN&122
Spanish II  
5

Foreign Language 3 Electives   7

Course ID
Course Title
Credits
ASL& 123
Am Sign Language III  
5
FRCH&123
French III  
5
SPAN&123
Spanish III  
5

Health/PE Group A Electives   5

Course ID
Course Title
Credits

Health/PE Group B Electives   6

Course ID
Course Title
Credits

Lab Science Electives   1

Course ID
Course Title
Credits
ASTR&101
Intro to Astronomy  
5
ENVS&101
Intro to Env Science  
5
GEOL&101
Intro Physical Geology  
5
PHYS 101
General Physics  
5

Science 1 Electives   3

Course ID
Course Title
Credits

Science 2 Electives   3

Course ID
Course Title
Credits

Social Science Electives   8

Course ID
Course Title
Credits
1 Recommended: ASTR& 101, ENVS& 101, GEOL& 101, PHYS 100, or any other lab science
2 SPAN, FREN, or ASL & 121 if you haven’t completed two years of foreign language in high school OR another course from the Social Sciences Distribution list
3 Recommended: Any ASTR, ENVS, GEOL, PHYS, NUTRI, or OCEA in a subject you haven’t already taken. Can be lab or non-lab.
4 SPAN, FREN, or ASL & 122 if you haven’t completed two years of foreign language in high school OR Diversity course
5 Any three-credit course from Health/PE Group A
6 Any two-credit activity course from Group B
7 SPAN, FREN, or ASL& 123 if you haven’t completed two years of foreign language in high school OR any elective
8 Recommended: ECON, or POLS or any other course student is interested in

Estimated costs for completing this program

 
WA Resident
Non-Resident
International
Tuition
$ 9,733
$ 11,570
$ 22,036
Books
$ 658
$ 658
$ 658
Course Fees
$ 5
$ 5
$ 5
Institutional Fees
$ 672
$ 672
$ 3,195
Total Costs
$ 11,068
$ 12,905
$ 25,894

Costs for completing a degree or certificate can vary. For more information about costs, visit our How Much Does it Cost? page.

The Spokane Community College nursing program meets the requirements for licensure in Washington State. The nursing program has not made a determination that the curriculum meets the requirements for licensure in any other state/jurisdiction. Please check with the state/jurisdiction where you hope to be licensed. 

Licensure Requirements by State (Resource is from the National Council of State Boards of Nursing):

To easily find professional nursing licensure requirements (RN, PN, and APRN programs), please click on the button below and select the states/jurisdictions where you want to know their professional licensure requirements.

Disclaimer: NCSBN has gathered this information from a variety of sources. Although NCSBN has made every effort to provide complete, accurate, and up-to-date information, NCSBN makes no warranties, express or implied, or representations as to the accuracy or reliability of this information. The information is fluid and evolving. Spokane Community College and NCSBN assume no liability or responsibility for any errors or omissions in the information contained in this resource.

Have a question? Let's hear it.

Michael Buckley

Social Sciences & Humanities Department Chair
Michael.Buckley@scc.spokane.edu
509-533-8845