HNC stand for "Higher National Certificate"
An HNC is equivalent to the first year of a uni course. An HND is equivalent to the second year of a uni course. As for a NVQ level 4 i don't think it is as good as a HNC.
+2
Guanidine is a base. The chemical formula is HNC(NH2)2.
Suitable candidate will have at least an HNC in a related discipline.
no it is the same level just a different name
In England, Wales and Northern Ireland, a HNC (previously a level 4 qualification) is now Level 5 on the National Qualifications Framework.In Scotland, an HNC is Level 7 on the Scottish Credit and Qualifications Framework. (Wikipedia)For the source and more detailed information concerning your request, click under the related links section (Wikipedia) indicated directly below this answer section.
HND is higher than a HNCHNC stands for Higher National Certificate whereas HND stands for Higher Nationla Diploma.HNC requires ten units and a HND requires 16 units.A HNC can be topped up to a HND with the additonal 6 units.A HND is therefore higher than a HNC.A HNC starting from scratch will take 4-5 years (No prior qaulifications in the given field.)HND Courses are normally only 1 year. But for some strange reason, Colleges will class them as 2-year courses because you MUST do HNC qaulification with them first.
To work as a scaffold design engineer you must earn a degree in HNC Engineering. These courses can be taken at a local college.
You can seek the information from a friend who has already worked on the project. Visit the library to conduct more research.
usually... nothing spectacular... just shopfloor work... if your wanting to move up in a business, then you will be best off doing the HNC... IF your lucky, you could even find an employer that will pay fo this... whilst you work for them... this is how many apprenticships work.
Ferric means iron is in the +3 state; hydroxide means the anion is the OH- ion. So the whole formula is Fe(OH)3.