Trial lawyers wear wigs. The qualification of a barrister is called call. If you want to call as a barrister, you need to take a lawyer course after graduating from law school. If Chambers wants you after graduation (the barrister's law firm is Chambers). Then you go in as an apprentice. But it's hard to say when it will turn positive. Only when there are places can you call in a formal trial lawyer. In the meantime, the law firm supports you. Some people have been apprentices for 10 years. I've heard of it, too. It became a barrister. If you do well, barristers who appear in court for more than 10- 15 will be awarded the title of Queen's Counsel (KC or QC) by judges and lawyers' associations, and the qualification of Queen's Counsel is called diaosi.
A solicitor is a lawyer who cannot appear in court. The qualification of a solicitor is called qualified. If you want to be a junior lawyer, you must have a bachelor degree in law. If you don't, you can take a one-year DGL compression course to make up for it. Then take another year of LPC course. Then if you are asked by a law firm (a law firm is called a law firm), you can go in for an internship for two years. Then turn positive. The lawyer did a good job. Maybe 10 years later, you will have a chance to be promoted to partner.
Whether you can be a lawyer in Britain depends entirely on whether the law firm wants you or not. Some of them want you to pay the tuition and living expenses in full. Every year, the number of places is very small, from a few people to a dozen people in a university. So it is difficult to be a lawyer in England. They are all talents among talents. Elaboration is much more difficult than being a lawyer in America.
Basically, in Britain, if you don't get the first place with a score of 2- 1, you won't want to go to college.
Besides, China people can't be barristers. There is no explicit restriction, but no law firm is willing to let a person whose mother tongue is not English be a trial lawyer. I have been in England for so long that I know many senior lawyers and royal counsel. No one is from China. At most, some Asians. The BBC, which can't speak Chinese for a long time. Trial lawyers will not consider this issue. The best thing I have ever seen is to qualify as a barrister, but I ended up in a law firm.
Besides, your bachelor's degree in China is not recognized in Britain. You can get a master's degree in law, but the law firm doesn't recognize your bachelor's degree. You need to take an undergraduate course or GDL again.
If you want to be a lawyer in Britain, I still suggest that you don't study for a master's degree in law, go directly to GDL, then LPC, and apply for a law firm while studying. Fortunately, the law firm will help you solve the previous tuition and living expenses subsidies. But your grades must be excellent.