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Empire College Associate in Legal Support Services

5 Associate Degrees Awarded

The main focus area for this major is Legal Assistant/Paralegal. For more details on this concentration, visit its profile page.

Legal Support Services is a major offered under the legal professions program of study at Empire College. We’ve gathered data and other essential information about the associate degree program in legal support, such as if the program is offered online, ethnicity of students, how many students graduated in recent times, and more.

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The average cost for an undergraduate to attend Empire College is unavailable at this time due to insufficient data.

Empire College does not offer an online option for its legal support associate degree program at this time. To see if the school offers distance learning options in other areas, visit the Empire College Online Learning page.

5 Associate Degrees Awarded
100.0% Women
40.0% Racial-Ethnic Minorities*
During the 2019-2020 academic year, there were 5 associate degrees in legal support handed out to qualified students. The charts and tables below give more information about these students.

Male-to-Female Ratio

All of the students who received their Associate in legal support in 2019-2020 were women.

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Racial-Ethnic Diversity

Of those graduates who received an associate degree in legal support at Empire College in 2019-2020, 40.0% were racial-ethnic minorities*. This is lower than the nationwide number of 42%.

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Race/EthnicityNumber of Students
Asian0
Black or African American0
Hispanic or Latino2
Native American or Alaska Native0
Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander0
White3
International Students0
Other Races/Ethnicities0

Legal Support Services students may decide to major in one of the following focus areas.

Focus AreaAnnual Graduates
Legal Assistant/Paralegal5

References

*The racial-ethnic minorities count is calculated by taking the total number of students and subtracting white students, international students, and students whose race/ethnicity was unknown. This number is then divided by the total number of students at the school to obtain the racial-ethnic minorities percentage.

More about our data sources and methodologies.

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