Not really as long as you have completed The Bachelor's at a regionally accredited college or university.
Nope, not yet. At any school you have to get a BA right, then get into a grad school to be a NP which PSU does have. (current PSU nursing student)
In the U.S., Yes. You can attend law school as long as your BA is from an accredited four year college/university. It does not matter what your B.A. is in.
The bachelor of arts (BA) and the bachelor in science (BS) are both undergraduate degree programs. The master's and doctorate are graduate degrees. You can take a second bachelor's degree if you like, but you will still be in an undergraduate degree program. So, you would not go to graduate school for the second degree.
George Washington: No DegreeJohn Adams: Grad -- Harvard College (now Harvard University) in 1755.Thomas Jefferson: Grad -- the College of William & Mary (VA) in 1762.James Madison: Grad -- the College of New Jersey (now Princeton) in 1771.James Monroe: No DegreeJohn Quincy Adams: Grad -- Harvard College in 1788.Andrew Jackson: No DegreeMartin Van Buren: No DegreeWilliam Henry Harrison: No DegreeJohn Tyler: Grad -- College of William & Mary (VA) in 1807.James K. Polk: Grad -- University of North Carolina in 1818.Zachary Taylor: No DegreeMillard Fillmore: No DegreeFranklin Pierce: Grad -- Bowdoin College in 1824.James Buchanan: Grad -- Dickinson College in 1809.Abraham Lincoln: No DegreeAndrew Johnson: No DegreeUlysses S. Grant: Grad -- United States Military Academy (West Point) in 1843.Rutherford B. Hayes: Grad -- Harvard Law School in 1845.James A. Garfield: Grad -- Williams College in 1856.Chester A. Arthur: Grad -- Union College in 1848.Grover Cleveland: No DegreeBenjamin Harrison: Grad -- Miami University (Ohio) in 1852.(Grover Cleveland's Second Term)William McKinley: Graduated from Poland Seminary, but never took a degree.Theodore Roosevelt: Grad -- Harvard College in 1880.William Howard Taft: Grad -- Yale in 1878 & Cincinnati Law School in 1880.Woodrow Wilson: Grad -- Johns Hopkins University, Ph.D. History & Poly Sci, 1886.Warren G. Harding: Grad -- Ohio Central College in 1882.Calvin Coolidge: Grad -- Amherst College in 1897.Herbert Hoover: Grad -- Stanford University in 1895.Franklin Delano Roosevelt: Grad -- Harvard University in 1904.Harry S. Truman: No DegreeDwight D. Eisenhower: Grad -- United States Military Academy (West Point) in 1915.John Fitzgerald Kennedy: Grad -- Harvard University in 1940.Lyndon Baines Johnson: Grad -- Southwest Texas State in 1930.Richard Milhous Nixon: Grad -- Duke University, School of Law in 1937.Gerald R. Ford: Grad -- University of Michigan, B.A. Economics in 1935 & Yale Law School, Ll.B. in 1940.James Earl Carter: Grad B.S., United States Naval Academy in 1945.Ronald Reagan: Grad -- Eureka College in 1932.George H.W. Bush: Grad -- Yale in 1948.William Jefferson Clinton: Grad -- Yale Law School in 1973.George W. Bush: Grad -- Yale, B.A. History in 1968 & Harvard Business School, MBA in 1975.Barack Hussein Obama: Grad -- Columbia University, BA. Harvard Law School in 1991.
Yes. To enter a grad program means you have to have completed a BS/BA degree. That's why it is called "grad" you graduated all ready to go into a MA program.
yes as a matter of fact i saw in a magazine her kissing a humongous (fat) guy and she was ba ba ba ba ba she was lovin it!
This is dependent on the specific school if you are transferring, and they will have a limit. If the same school, then I would imagine you would need from one to two years. However, this is something you really need to ask the school you are going to attend. They will be the only source for accurate information in the case.
4 year BA, plus 2-3 years post grad...at minimum these days.
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.
High school credits don't matter here. You need to go to a university and have a BA/BS to apply to ANY medical school. Forget high school. It is the college that counts and that you have 4 years completed.
No
No, not if your credit hours from you AA are accepted at the college you want to finish your BA at. I know someone that had a AA in Business and went two more years for the BA in Teacher Education. They told her as long as the credits are accepted you are fine, no matter what the field.