Undergraduate Studies

Pre-Professional Studies

Law

Complete a bachelor’s degree at CMU that will serve you in the field of law. One of the major benefits of studying at CMU is the intersectionality that our courses and common curriculum offer. Take courses in the fields of business, peace and conflict transformation studies, sociology, or create your own major and explore what impacts you the most. Doing your undergraduate work at CMU means that you will study under professors who want to see you succeed and thrive during, and after, your undergraduate degree.

Here is a sample of courses that could act as a step on your journey towards a future degree in Law:

  • HIST/INDS-2040 History of Indigenous Peoples of Canada
  • ENGL-2420W Creative Writing: Poetry 
  • BUSI-3500 International Business
  • POLS/COMM/SOCI-3000 Politics, Society, and Mass Media
  • PCTS-1110 Introduction to Peace and Conflict Transformation
  • BUSI-2040/POLS-2040 Business and Labour Law
  • SOCI-2020 Communities and Organizations
  • ENVS/PCTS-2620W Ecological Peacebuilding
  • PSYC-2200 Developmental Psychology: Childhood

Other electives and requirements dependant on major of choice from CMU or courses on Letter of Permission.

The Commons: What Sets CMU Apart

Please Note

  • It is important that you inquire about admission and program requirements at the universities you are considering after CMU. You should work with the Advising office at CMU to construct a program of studies that will achieve your objectives. This is the responsibility of the student.

CMU is distinguished by its vision of the Commons. The Commons is the implementation of an interdisciplinary education. This approach creates graduates that write persuasively, speak confidently, and think critically. CMU is committed not only to giving students a credential, but to inviting them into a formative experience in which they exercise their thinking within a community of real-world engagement.

The Commons means that there are certain classes that all students get to take. These classes pull from core disciplines including Making, Theology, Science, Social Science, Indigenous Studies, Anabaptist Studies, and Ways of Knowing.

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