In the context of college applications, it would mean bachelor of science--a baccalaureate degree. A four-year college awards a baccalaureate, B.S. or B.A. (bachelor of arts).
It has other meanings in other contexts. In conversation it usually means something else.
Its a degree which is equivalent to B.Sc......
B.Sc is 2 years and BS is 4 years programme
In education, it stands for a bachelor in science (BS) degree.
BS stands for, in the education world, a degree of Bachelor of Science, while MS stands for Master of Science.
Bachelor of Studies
This is also a four year Engineering degree awarded by some of the American Universities
Bachelor of Science
As slang: BS stands for Baby Slang.
Uplink is from MS to BS Downlink is from BS to MS P.S: BS=Base Station, MS=Mobile Station e.g cell phone
Bs ms ms
MS in Nursing
The Lahore University of Management Sciences offers the following degree programs: biology (BS, MS, PhD), chemistry (BS, MS, PhD), computer science (BS, MS, PhD), electrical engineering (BS, MS, PhD), mathematics (BS, MS, PhD), physics (BS, MS, PhD), economics (BSc, MSc), economics and politics (BSc), political science (BSc), anthropology and sociology (BSc), accounting and finance (BSc), management science (BSc, PhD), humanities (BA), history (BA), BA-LL.B, MBA, Executive MBA.
Yeah you can. For sure as Avionics is nothing but Electrical systems in Aircrafts.
In the UK, typically they are written in the order in which you received the degrees. (So BS, MS).
At least a BS, an MS, and a PhD.
BS stands for Bachelor of Science as opposed to BA which stands for Bachelor of Arts
Update BS NS in your resume mean
Purdue University, BS, 1975; MS, 1976.
University of Georgia, BS, 1963; University of Maine, MS, 1966; University of Maine, MS, 1967.
An example would have helped. If it's "Dr. O.G. Wottaschnozzle, BS, MS, MD" it means "Master of Science".