An undergraduate is someone who graduated with an Associate's Degree or a Bachelor's Degree. A graduate is someone who graduated with a Master's Degree or higher.
The associate and bachelor degrees are undergraduate degrees. The master's and doctorate degrees are graduate degrees and advanced study that follows The Bachelor's degree.
Undergrad
She went to Oberlin for undergrad and Pitt for grad school
She went to Oberlin for undergrad and Pitt for grad school
The best undergrad degree to have would be either in psychology, sociology, or social work
Grad school doesn't have latin distinctions. It's usually for undergrad and if grad school then it's only for law school.
An 'undergrad' is a college student who is working towards his/her Bachelors or Associates degree. Once you have received your Bachelors degree, you will work towards your Master's degree, and you will be considered a 'grad' student.
A graduate BSc or Post-Grad student if continuing studies.
The answer is NO if you're referring to BGLOs. This is frowned on and can get you blackballed.
Usually a minimum of 6 years. 4 years undergrad and at least 2 years grad work.
Berkeley, by far. I went to Berkeley, Stanford, and Harvard for my education (undergrad and grad) and Berkeley's reputation as the toughest is well deserved.
The college/university may require you to go back and take undergrad classes in psychology before grad work. Since you didn't do a BA/BS in psychology you wouldn't have some of the foundation classes required for grad work.
In the US the aggregate borrowing limit is ~138k. This includes undergrad and grad. Numerous additional stipulations and regulations apply. See fsa.ed.gov for more information.