Father Therodore Hessburg of Notre Dame holds the title according to the Guniess Book of World Records with more than 150 honorary degrees
there are two types of courses for nursing,general and bachelor degree,for general it will take 3 and half year to complete the course,for bachelor degree 4 years of study...........
Your high school course will not matter. Your college courses will not matter, as long as you obtain your bachelor's degree.
Duration: Four yearsThe University of Southampton's Health Sciences Faculty is a leading training provider for students wishing to embark on a career in healthcare. Its new nursing degree courses were the first in the country to be officially approved by the Nursing and Midwifery Council. In addition, the University of Southampton offers midwifery degree courses, clinical practice degree courses, healthcare science degree courses, occupational therapy degree courses, physiotherapy degree courses, podiatry degree courses and public health practice degree courses.
In US it takes about 120-128 credits or about four years.In Asian countries it takes 3 years after completion of 12 years of schooling (10 +2).However some bachelor's degree after graduation takes 1-2 years as in Bachelor of Education degree. (B.Ed)
Most bachelor degree programs are four years.
A bachelor's degree takes typically 4 years.
it would depend.
You're best option is to go through a RN-BSN bridge program. These courses can often be done partially on line and take a little over a year to complete.
Yes, that is a professional degree as long as it is a BA.
fo years
The bachelor's degree does not expire. There is no time limit in which to start the master's degree.
It depends on exactly which courses you have completed at the associate level, and how they fit in to the bachelor's degree. When students finish the associate degree within a transfer program, then transfer to a four year institution within the same major, it typically takes an additional two years. However, in your case this is not a transfer program, and I assume it is an associate of applied science degree. Thus, I would imagine while some courses would transfer, there will be few that do.