NO
depends on the area of study. My masters of fine art took 3.5 years, this is typical for this degree, since it is more than a masters, buy less than a PhD. Typically a masters should take 2 yrs.(full time). It depends on the school and their expectations for the degree and discipline. Normally you have up to seven years to complete your degree once you start it.
Typically, no less than a masters degree with a PhD preferred.
If you plan on becoming a dermatologist, you must first earn a bachelor's degree, then attend an accredited four-year medical school. During medical school you will participate in a dermatology residency program for no less than one year.
Most people take 2 years, but it can be done in less.
A masters degree typically can take two to three years for full time students. Depending upon how many credit hours you've received and whether or not they transfer you may spend a year or less in obtaining your degree.
Personal opinion is, any field within the business area should be no less than a bachelors degree with further attainment of a masters degree in mind.
A person must attend medical school and receive an MD or DO to become a pathologist in the U.S. There are a few medical schools with accelerated programs that allow students to receive both an undergraduate degree and a medical degree in less time and without as much of the stress of the usual medical school admissions process.Generally, a degree in chemistry or biology would have the most classes in common with prerequisites for medical school, but many undergraduate degrees would be acceptable. Engaging in undergraduate scientific research that involves pathology or pathogenesis would be helpful. A degree in microbiology would involve similar labor to a pathologist in terms of interpreting slides and understanding molecular disease process, but there is no experience with gross anatomy.
I could not give you an actual difference in salary because it depends on the job. But it a bachelor's degree will most likely earn you less pay than a masters degree.
how to became a forensic patologistYou can also decide to go to medical school and become a medical examiner.Working with dead people is so much easier than working with the live ones. Less back talk.
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.
If you have your Masters Degree, good for you. Jobs are hard to find with the economy in it's current state. You will be competing with people with their Bachelors. This means they have less education, but cost less. Sell yourself well and there are plenty of good jobs for you.
This is not a particularly appropriate way to choose a masters degree, however if you must, there are some accelerate masters degree offered by many colleges and universities. Try the University of Phoenix (online degrees). Its a good solid school, fully accredited, with a number of programs you can finish within a two year period. It is a little pricey though. However, if you like you can research other institutions with the same format.