Court Reporting Training
Los Angeles, California
Four out of the top five highest paid Los Angeles Court Reporters are Bryan College of Court Reporting graduates
The Court Reporting program at Bryan College can help prepare you for a career as a highly demanded court reporter offering great income potential, security, opportunities for growth, and flexibility.
For over 60 years, Bryan College of Court Reporting has provided students with a practical and dynamic educational program, producing the finest court reporters in the nation. Approved by the National Court Reporters Association, Bryan College affords students the most practical and dynamic court reporting education experience possible.
Some of the benefits of choosing a career in the field of court reporting are:
- You can earn a great income--for example, the starting salary in the Los Angeles Superior Court is $113,000 a year* (salary, transcript fees, and benefits.)
- You can find employment nationwide--currently, there’s a shortage of skilled court reporters available to provide this crucial service.
- You can set your own hours--in many cases, Bryan College of Court Reporting graduates have opened their own court reporting agencies.
Bryan College Programs:
- Court Reporting
- Court Reporting - Online
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Career Outlook
Court reporters are highly skilled professionals who record history just as it happens in the courtroom. Using the latest technology, a court reporter can transcribe a verbatim account of the spoken word, often in real time. Because of this unique ability, the court reporters’ domain is not limited to just the courtroom. Congress, conventions, classrooms, even television studios routinely employ the services only a well-trained court reporter can offer.
Across the country, there’s a shortage of experienced court reporters. According to the US Department of Labor Occupational Outlook Handbook**, "...demand for court reporter services will be spurred by the continuing need for accurate transcription of proceedings in courts and in pretrial depositions and by the growing need to create captions for live or prerecorded television... Despite the good job prospects, fewer people are going into this profession, creating a shortage of court reporters-particularly stenographic typists-and making job opportunities very good to excellent...demand for these highly skilled reporters will remain high."
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*Los Angeles Auditor-Controller's Office
**Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor, Occupational Outlook Handbook, 2004-05 Edition, Court Reporters, (visited October 26, 2005).
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