From medical school to engineering to law, pre-professional tracks in our undergraduate programs prepare you for a professional degree. A pre-professional track is a series of courses taken in addition to the required curriculum in your major that ensures you'll be ready for the next step in your professional career.
We are here to further the opportunities of students interested in Health Professions by providing individual guidance to any student, regardless of their major.
Pre-Health students major in a variety of disciplines and may decide to pursue study in a variety of fields after graduation, including, but not limited to: medical, dental, veterinary, physical therapy, occupational therapy, and nursing.
Meet with your success coach for major discernment, field of study and degree planning, application and personal statements. Meet with a career coach for understanding and navigating graduate school process. Meet with your faculty advisor to talk about course content, degree progression, and career or pre-health exploration.
The pre-engineering coursework provides a strong foundation in science, mathematics, and engineering.
St. Edward's also offers ESTEEM: Notre Dame, an innovative 11-month entrepreneurship master's program through our sister school, Notre Dame.
These educational pathways are attractive not only to our students, but to the engineering faculty at our partner institutions as well as prospective employers for the program graduates. With a solid liberal arts foundation, students who proceed through these dual degree programs are well-prepared for their engineering coursework and careers. In particular, the St. Edward's curriculum helps students to develop outstanding communication skills in multiple media, strong problem-solving skills through challenging courses, and a solid grounding through an understanding of the broader societal context that is developed via the Holy Cross approach to higher education and through the humanities and social science courses that are part of our general education curriculum.
The Pre-Law Advising Program helps students develop the communicative, analytical, and methodological skills important to the legal profession. The American Bar Association does not recommend any particular undergraduate majors, as students are admitted to law school from almost every academic discipline.
Many students choose to major in subjects considered to be traditional preparation for law school, such as history, English, communications, business, or political science. We recommend students explore a broad liberal arts education to prepare for law school, graduate school, or employment in the public or private sector.
Meet with your success coach for major discernment, field of study and degree planning, application and personal statements. Meet with a career coach for understanding and navigating graduate school process. Meet with your faculty advisor to talk about course content, degree progression, and career or pre-law exploration.