Yes you can. However, if the specific program of study at the master's level requires some prerequisites, you may have to take them at the undergraduate level first (if you have not do so already).
The bachelors degree can open the doors to many programs of study. However you must meet the entrance requirements mandated by the graduate level program.
Certainly! You may have to take a larger number of pre-requisite courses in order to complete it, but there is no reason you can't to it.
No but I could be wrong. It wouldn't make sense anyway.
If there are both a BS and BA offered for the same area then BS is more respected than a BA.
No, the master's degree is advanced study that follows the bachelor's degree.
You need to complete a bachelor's degree before applying to graduate school for your master's. A master's is advanced coursework post bachelor's degree.
A BA is a bachelor of arts degree, a BS is a bachelor of science degree. Both take four years to earn.
BA.
BA
BS
In college a BA is a bachelors degree of arts. A BS is a bachelors degree in science. Most students get a BA.
BA
you are bs
BA and BS
BA is a Bachelor of Arts. BS is a Bachelor of Science. They are both three to five year degrees.
Apply to a college that awards BS/BA degrees, or get an associates degree from a junior college ( maintain a high GPA) and then apply to a school that offers BS/BA degrees. Complete the requirements for a BS/BA, acquire a degree. (make sure to keep your GPA high) Take the LSAT( study/take a review course for this). Apply to law schools. Good luck.
BS stands for Bachelor of Science as opposed to BA which stands for Bachelor of Arts
It depends on the school's preference, however, typically it is a BS.