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court interpreter Associate Degree

court interpreter Associate Degrees

There are 1 schools in the United States where you can earn aassociate degree in court interpreter.

Education Levels of court interpreter Majors

In the most recent reporting year, 2 students earned theircourt interpreter majors across all award levels. The following table shows the number of diplomas awarded in court interpreter at each degree level.

Education Level Number of Grads
Master’s Degree 2

Earnings of court interpreter Majors With Associate Degrees (All Award Levels)

The median salary for graduates holding aassociate degree in court interpreter of $37,648 four years after graduation. These figures are reported program-wide, across all award levels.

This number may vary for many reasons. For instance, you may move to a location where people with your degree are rare and make more money.

Years After Graduation Median Earnings
1 year $37,277
4 years $37,648
5 years $42,965

Source: U.S. Department of Education College Scorecard, field-of-study earnings tracker (program-wide, all award levels).

Student Debt (All Award Levels)

The data on debt ranges for court interpreter majors who have their associate degree is not currently available.

There are 1 colleges that offer a associate degree in court interpreter. Learn more about the most popular below:

White Earth Tribal and Community College tops the list of the most popular schools in the U.S. for court interpreter majors seeking their associate degree. During the most recent year for which we have data, 2 people received their associate degree in court interpreter from this school. Graduates who complete their associate degree in court interpreter here go on to a median salary of $40,669.

Below are some popular majors similar to court interpreter that also offer associate degrees.

Major Annual Degrees Awarded
Legal Assistant/Paralegal 9,493
Legal Administrative Assistant/Secretary 403
Court Reporting and Captioning/Court Reporter 380
Legal Support Services, Other 212
Scopist 2

References

The racial-ethnic minority student 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 to obtain the percentage of racial-ethnic minorities.

More about our data sources and methodologies.

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