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A postgraduate degree is a degree you get after your undergraduate degree, so for example a Master's degree or a Ph.D. A postsecondary degree is a degree you get after high school (high school = secondary school), such as a B.A. or B.Sc. A postsecondary degree is usually referred to as an undergraduate degree. (At least in my neck of the woods.)
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.
Transfer to a four year college or university that offers the bachelor's degree in criminal justice. Submit your associates degree transcript to that institution and they will transfer all usable credits toward your criminal justice degree. With an associates in liberal arts, and transferring to a criminal justice program, most, if not all credits should be transferable.
* associates degree - 60 to 64 credits * bachelor's degree - 120 to 128 credits * master's degree - 30 to 30 plus (post bachelor's degree) depending on the specific program of study. * doctorate - approximately 60 credits (post bachelor's degree) plus dissertation.
The ECTS credits for the Bachelor's degree from India is calculated by taking all the credits of each academic year.
24 credits towards a Bachelors degree; in addition to 24 needed for the associates
A bachelor degree is a four-year degree and takes about 128 credits to obtain. An associate's degree is a two year degree and takes about 64 credits to obtain.
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.
Universities have a number of credits that you must take to earn a degree. Some people take more because they have another goal. That goal may be to have greater options for jobs or to get into a graduate program that has requirements for those credits, or simply for enjoyment of learning.
Possible.
Generally what they are asking for is the number of credit hours of coursework you have completed after your most recent degree was awarded. If you took more credits than were required for your degree but took them before the degree was awarded, they generally are just lumped in with the required credits and not reported separately.
Depending on the specialty, it could take between 33 and 46 credits.