Le truc pour entrer en droit c'est d'entrer dans un programme facile (la plupart prennent Sciences Politiques, j'sais pas si c'est facile mais les gens que je connaissent ont fait ça) et quand tu as une bonne cote universitaire tu fais la demande pour entrer en droit.
Sont rare ceux qui passent straight du cégep en droit ma te dire!
Worst idea ever.
Law admissions from cegep take r-score into count, and r-score takes group force into count. So if you go to a no-name cegep full of retards, it'll be harder to get above 30 than someone who goes to Brebeuf, simply because the group force index will penalize you. (I know, it's unfair, deal with it).
That's why i've seen so many retards from brebeuf/marianopolis get into law with 75-80% averages while the rest have to get at least 85-90% to get similar r-scores.
I graduated cegep with a 32 r-score but decided to do a bachelor of business at UQAM then went to McGill law afterwards with a 4.0/4.3 GPA. In university, at least in Quebec, admissions count towards a similar fashion to cegep, aka GPA but also a Cote de Rendement Universitaire, which is determined on the strenght of your program.
The harder your program is, the higher your CRU will be at the time of admission. The good thing here is that the penalty for being in a bad program won't be as brutal as being in a bad cegep. But if i were you i wouldn't take risks.
Programs in university that are good for switching into Law are usually the ones who require more than 24 r-score to get in. Some programs you might consider for switching:
Industrial Relations
Business
Political Science (Not in UQAM)
Communications
Psychology
Engineering/Biomedical sciences/Biochem
Programs to AVOID at all costs if you want to switch into Law:
History
Arts history
Sociology
Anthropology
Philosophy
If you plan to FINISH the first bac before going into law (A lot of people do that), then the CRU needed to get in will be lower, so any program you complete with a decently high GPA would be viable for admission because the credits completed will weight a lot more in your record. For switching after 1-2 years, then refer to the list i posted above.
Now concerning your cegep r-score, well, if you're starting a 2-year DEC with an r-score below 25, i honestly wouldn't bother unless you're going to a private cegep that hands 30s to any retard who gets 75% due to inflated group-force indexes.
Oh and please what ever you do, DO NOT ENTER THE CERTIFICAT EN DROIT AT UDEM. It's a moneytrap so they can make cash out of the rejects and only a few get to switch to the bac, even a 3.8/4.3 doesn't assure you a switch. Only certificate where the switch-to-bac is garanteed in UdeM is the certificat en relations industrielles.