Individuals who pursue a masters degree come from a variety of undergraduate backgrounds. Which masters to take is dependent on what your overall career goals and objectives are. For example, my bachelors is in psychology with a collateral program in gerontology. However, my masters degree is in organizational management. Just make sure your career goal is specific. Once you have a vision of exactly want it is you really want to do, your path to accomplish it will become clear.
The next degree is the master's degree.
its a graduate, you graduate after your bachelors degree
masters is more advanced
Yes an Associate and bachelors come before your Masters degree.
a bachelors degree is based on a year plan, while a masters degree is six year plan and is usually more in debth on whatever you are majoring in.
You need a PhD, which is beyond a Master's Degree. Meaning that you'd get an Associate's first, then a Bachelor's, then a Master's, then a Doctoral.
Typically no. However, the bachelors degree does not always have to be in a related field.
Samuel Adams earned his bachelors degree in 1740 earned his Master degree in 1743
The degree one typically receives after the Bachelors degree is a Masters degree. Note: the actual degree title is Master of Science or Master of Arts, etc.; however one speaks of having a Master's degree in
at least four years of college for a bachelors degree and an additional 2 or 3 years for a masters degree
In most places, it would be Doctorate in Veterinary Medecine (DVM).
Ph.d degree is an advanced degree after the Master's degree. Ph.d is short for 'Doctor of Philosophy' It is not a degree "after the master's degree" but an advanced degree after your Bachelors. Many people go straight from BA to doctorate. For instance MD's. :-)