The integrated bachelor's/master's program allows students to be admitted to a graduate program earlier in their undergraduate studies. Graduate-level course work is taken during the senior year and counts twice, first as credit toward the graduate degree and then as the undergraduate course work needed to complete the bachelor's degree. Students may complete their undergraduate degree in the three-year program or in the traditional four-year program.
The program pairs undergraduate and graduate programs that best fit together so students can mix and match disciplines for the two degrees. For example, integrating The Bachelor's and master's degrees in physics is a natural combination but so is a bachelor's degree in exercise and sports science combined with a master's degree in physical therapy. Other combinations, including those from the health and physical sciences, education, and the liberal arts, are available.
For institutions that offer this type of program, the approach may by particular to each institution.
No, they are quite apart form each other. I mean they are not related at all.
BSc or Ba (if you mean a bachelors degree).
It can infer the same level of training and education, but they are generally used differently. Professional training can mean a trade school instead of college, whereas, professional education is anything beyond a bachelors degree which would mean at least a masters degree.
I think a BA is a Bachelors in Arts and an MBA is a Masters in Business Associates. BA is for artists, and MBAs are for people in business There are two general types of degrees, BS and BA, BS is a Bachelors in Science, what that basically means is you will be doing more hands on, like doctors, engineers, etc. BA is Bachelors in Arts, this means that you will be doing more with the mind, like teachers, music, art, chefs, etc. An MBA is Masters in Business Administration, this doesn't mean you have to be a teacher, all it means is that you have a more advance degree in a specialized area than a bachelors. a bachelors takes 4 years to complete and a masters (including pre-requisites) takes about 2 additional years. Pay and job availability is a lot higher for someone with a masters degree. Check online on a few university's websites to get the requirements and other information.
If you mean starting your master's 10 years after completing your bachelors degree, yes! As long as you have completed a bachelor's degree, it doesn't matter how long you have been out of school. I started my masters 25 years after completing the bachelor's degree.
The word "Bachelors" as in a bachelors degree means "learned enough in the field to make a living at it". In a trade guild, it would be called "Journeyman".
That depends on the program itself. "Certificate" can mean a certification after Junior College (below Bachelors), or something like a teaching certificate (concurrent with a bachelors in Education), or well above a Masters (a "performers certificate" from a classical music school).
The doctoral gown is a more elaborate than the bachelors, and masters gowns. The facings and crossbars may be of velvet of the color distinctive to the field of study to which the degree pertains.
Do you mean Bachelors Degree ??
Its the degree MEd means a Masters degree in Education
The words "college" versus "university" can be confusing......especially in the US, where they can mean different things, depending on the state and/or the school(s) in question.It would be nice if things in the US were more like they are in the UK, when it comes to the difference between "college" and "university." In the UK, the university is the large, overall institution; and then each of its constituent parts are called colleges... like the University of London system.And in that (University of London) system, there is no difference: a masters degree is a masters degree.Gratefully, despite the less-clear difference between "college" and "university" in the US, a masters degree, regardless which kind of institution issues it, is the same, from either. A masters degree is a masters degree. Period.In pretty much all cases, a "masters" degree consists of from, typically, 32 to 48 graduate semester credit hours, beyond a 120 undergraduate-semester-credit-hour "bachelors" degree.Though the credits are calculated differently in the UK, it's still the same: first a bachelors degree, and then a masters degree; and it matters, not, whether it's from a school that calls itself a "college," or one that calls itself a "university." In either case, it's post-secondary, graduate-level higher-education that's immediatelly beyond the post-secondary undergraduate bachelors degree.
Its the degree MEd means a Masters degree in Education