This varies widely, but your basic credits like English , your Elective, Sociology , and maybe one or two others should transfer if you went to a Federally accredited College or University. Community College or online schooling often does NOT transfer.
The exact same way someone without a bachelors degree does. With an application.
I'm not really sure what you are asking... There are various levels of a "psychology degree": # you can have a Bachelor's Degree (4-year college) # you can have a Master's Degree (Bachelor's plus 2 years) # you can have a Doctorate Degree (Bachelor's plus 5-7 years) If you have a bachelors degree (4-year degree), you most likely have a major (or area that you studied to get that degree)... so the question is, did you major in psychology? if so, then you already have a psychology degree. It is just a bachelor degree, so you will not likely be able to do much with it. If you are asking how long it takes to be a psychologist, then you are most likely referring to the doctorate degree mentioned above... that will take and additional 5-7 years to get after your bachelor's degree.
It would be preferable to get work experience first. Because you already have an existing bachelor's degree and wish to stay in the nursing field, you could look into becoming a nurse practitioner which would require a master's degree in nursing. Lastly, you already have a bachelor's degree so pursuing another bachelors degree would make no sense in this case.
Yes, you can make that switch at the masters level. I would not call this a major hurtle, but you may be required to take some prerequisite courses at the undergraduate level if you do not have them already. These could be within the social science area. I am not saying you will have to, but it is a possibility. Still, I would not call this a major hurtle. If this is a career you have your heart set on, then you will do it. Just remember, what ever you intend to do, do it out of passion, out of a love for what you do and the benefit it brings others as well as yourself. Only by this will you realize true success. Keep the vision!
Post bachelor's degree with all prerequisite coursework completed, there will be four years of medical school. There will also be an additional three or more years to complete the internship and residency requirements.
No, if you were in a transfer program, and in the same major, then it should take only two additional years to complete the bachelor's degree.
You can pursue any program of study. How much of what you have taken already will apply to that bachelor's degree will be dependent on the specific program of study. You really need to find your passion. Once you have that your path will become clear.
You will need to take different teacher certifications. Those very form state to state.
This is a stupid question.
it would depend.
You already have a bachelors, thus one option is to pursue the RN through a community college (AS). The general education courses you completed before should be usable toward the RN. In other words, the English, psychology, sociology, etc. What you will need to do, is satisfy the science requirements to include, anatomy and physiology I & II, microbiology, and chemistry. I would strongly suggest you complete these science courses before starting the professional phase of the program. The professional phase courses are very intense. So, you want to be able to concentrate on the nursing and that's all. When complete, you will be an RN, and you already have the bachelors. In addition, it will be a lot less expensive than going for another bachelors (BSN). Each college and their affiliate school of nursing will have requirements particular to their own school. Thus, check with the community colleges (start with your home county) that offer the RN program and inquire about the requirements. Try to stay away from non-college schools that offer just the diploma program.
yes