In the Philippine setting, there is no such thing as “specialization” unlike in the US or in other countries where the lawyers study and take the bar for a specific practice. You might be referring to a lawyer who “concentrates” in the practice of the family code and other related family and domestic relations law, especially with respect to adoption, annulment of marriages, declaration of nullity of marriage, legal separation, custody, support.
Law school requires that the enrollee be a Baccalaureate Degree holder, meaning you should have graduated a four year course at the very least. That four years already. If you are considering pursuit of legal education, and is about to enter college, I suggest that you take a Bachelor of Arts course like Philosophy, English, Political Science, Legal Management. Something which will require a lot of reading and will increase your vocabulary to adequately prepare you for any law school. Law School is another four years of school and one year for the review and taking the BAR EXAMS. All in all, if you are fresh out of high school, that is 9 more years AT LEAST.
I hope I answered your question quite clearly….

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