Court Reporting · North Carolina

Court Reporting colleges in North Carolina

Court Reporting program coverage in North Carolina is being verified. Use the filter-first search at /results to find related programs offered in the state.

Court Reporting trains you to capture and transcribe verbatim records of legal proceedings and live events, preparing you for state licensure or national certification as a reporter or captioner.

We're still verifying Court Reporting programs in North Carolina. Try a broader search at /results?q=Court Reporting or browse all colleges in North Carolina.

What you'll study in a Court Reporting program

  • Machine shorthand written on a stenotype keyboard at conversational speed
  • Stenotype theory and computer-aided transcription software workflows
  • Legal terminology, courtroom procedure, and deposition practice
  • Medical terminology for testimony and expert witnesses
  • English grammar, punctuation, and transcript formatting for the official record
  • Realtime writing and CART or captioning techniques for live events
  • Professional standards, ethics, and the reporter's duty of impartiality
  • Equipment operation, troubleshooting, and managing the record under deadline

Where a Court Reporting degree can lead

  • Court Reporter
  • Broadcast Captioner
  • CART Provider
  • Freelance Deposition Reporter
  • Legal Transcriptionist
  • Scopist

Typical pay: Early-career wages vary by employer, region, and experience (BLS, 2024 court reporters and simultaneous captioners median $67,310).

A Court Reporting program teaches the verbatim craft of recording and transcribing examinations, testimony, judicial orders, legal opinions, and other formal proceedings using print or electronic methods. Coursework centers on machine shorthand written on a stenotype keyboard, building speed and accuracy in real time, along with computer-aided transcription software that converts shorthand strokes into readable transcripts; some tracks also cover voice writing into a stenomask. Students learn legal and medical terminology, English grammar and punctuation for the record, transcript formatting, deposition and courtroom procedure, equipment operation, applicable regulations, and the professional standards and ethics that govern an impartial keeper of the record. Where Translation and Interpreting focuses on conveying meaning between two languages, this focuses on producing a complete, word-for-word written record of spoken English in real time, often under deadline.

Most students enter through a certificate or associate degree from an approved court reporting school and build the dictation speed that many programs and credentials require before sitting for a skills and written exam. Several states license or certify court reporters, and national credentials such as the Registered Professional Reporter are offered through professional associations; captioning and Communication Access Realtime Translation work for live broadcasts, classrooms, and accessibility services is a related path that draws on the same skills. Graduates work for trial and appellate courts, freelance deposition agencies, legislatures, broadcasters, and captioning providers, and many work as independent contractors. A program prepares you for the exam and the work rather than guaranteeing a job, and pay, caseloads, and demand vary by employer, region, certification, and experience.

In federal data for the closely related occupation of court reporters and simultaneous captioners, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $67,310 and projects employment to decline about 0.3% from 2024 to 2034; a postsecondary nondegree award is the typical entry-level education for that occupation. National figures are occupation-wide medians across all experience levels, not starting wages or graduate outcomes.

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