A bachelor's degree in most areas can require between 124 to 128 college credits particular to a specific program of study. This would be based on a college or university that operates on a regular two semester academic year which is the most common. For institutions that operate on a tri-semester or quarter-semester it would be quite different. That being said, the Bachelor's degree - in most cases - is designed as a four year program of study, provided the student is full-time and follows their chosen program of study as prescribed by the college or university, and also provided the individual does not require prerequisite or developmental coursework as a result of basic skills testing. The minimum credit load for a full-time student is no less than 12 credits per semester. However, to complete the degree within the four years, a credit load of approximately 15 to 18 credits is recommended. For individuals who work or who have other responsibilities that would prohibit them from attending full-time, completion of the degree may take twice as long. Still, some of this time can be cut down by attending summer sessions and/or interim sessions. In addition, the bachelors and associate degrees are referred to as undergraduate degrees while the Masters and Doctorate degrees referred to as graduate degrees.
four years
Obtaining a college degree is very important. For an Associates degree, 60 semester credits, for a Bachelors 120 credits are needed. This also depends on the college and degree specifics.
HAI
24 credits towards a Bachelors degree; in addition to 24 needed for the associates
The four year institution will attempt to use as many credits form your associates degree toward your bachelors degree. However, the Grade Point Average (GPA) you achieved in your associates degree will not be averaged in with the GPA you achieve toward your bachelors. For instance, if your GPA at the associates level was 3.5, at the bachelors level you once again start with a GPA of 0.00. In other words your starting fresh.
It depends on what degree you are completing, but most master's degrees require 30-36 credits to be completed after the bachelor's degree.
It depends on the specific program of study, and the evaluation from which colleges and universities make their transfer credit decisions. A bachelor's degree taken in the US can range between 120 to 128 credits. One problem with transferring credits to US colleges and universities from out of country is that the credit hours differ with many required courses having less than what is required within the US. On that bases many schools will not transfer that course in. For example, for schools in the US that operate on a regular semester system, a psychology course is three credits. If the evaluation indicated a course from India was 2 or 2.5 credits, the US school would not accept the course based of the fact there were less contact hours; thus it would not be equivalent. Still, this does not mean credits taken outside the US will not transfer. It just depends on what the evaluation indicates. Still, if the evaluation indicates the degree is equivalent as a whole, graduate schools in most cases will accept that as the required degree prerequisite.
If your associate's degree was in nursing, then it will take an additional 60 to 64 credits to complete the bachelor's degree. If it was not, then it depends on what your major was in at the associate degree level, and how many credits are actually transferable to the four years institution.
Depending on the specialty, it could take between 33 and 46 credits.
The degree will take 124 to 128 credits.
You need sixty college credits.
Yes you can. Just make sure you are taking a transferable associates degree. Many individuals start with an associates degree then transferring to a for year college or university to finish the bachelor's degree.