Hi
There are many university in USA who accepts 15 years of education, and these are Webber International University, Kutztown the University of Pennsylvania, Long Island university(case by case) etc
Regards
Biswajyoti Das
Manya education Pvt Ltd
http://www.usdreamz.com/search/label/15%20years%20of%20education
Golden Years - TV programme - was created on 1999-09-08.
In China full bachelor medical degrees are of 5 years. If less than four years without internship PMDC will not accept.
China has a nine-year compulsory education system, consisting of six years of primary school and three years of junior secondary school. After that, students can choose to attend three additional years of senior secondary school before moving on to higher education institutions such as universities and colleges. The education system places strong emphasis on academics and standardized testing.
The education system in Uzbekistan is divided into three levels: primary, secondary, and higher education. Primary education consists of 9 years, while secondary education covers 3 years of general education and 2-3 years of specialized education. Higher education is offered by universities and vocational schools, with bachelor's, master's, and doctoral degrees available.
Whateducation is available to the people in UkraineEducation is available for people all ages, starting with kindergarten, kids usually go to school at 5-6 years old and finish it after 12 years of education, after school they usually go to universities, where they mostly study for 5 years.
The Marshall Plan made in 1948 by the USA, helped the European nations to recover. It vas an aid programme which distributed about 14 billion dollars in 3 years. The Soviet Union and the "forced" socialist countries refused to accept it.
There are colleges that will evaluate life experience. For example, Thomas A. Edison State college in Trenton, New Jersey (USA), evaluates life experience through the development of a portfolio, and turns that work into college credits. Click on the related links section below for the college's web site.
1st AnswerThere wasn't higher education in this time. 90% of the population did not read or write. Only the clergy could and they wrote books as well as kept them. 2nd AnswerThe University of Bologna, opened in 1088, and was the first of almost sixty that opened before 1453. Medieval higher education evolved at an earlier date, however, as competing teachers congregated in cities such as Paris, which were known educational centers. The earliest universities developed when the teachers combined together in guild-like organizations designed to regulate education. The education of the early universities was in the liberal arts, of which there were precisely seven. These were grammar, dialectic, rhetoric, geometry, arithmetic, astronomy, and music. The first four years to six years of university education, leading to a bachelor's degree, were in the liberal arts. Additional studies included law, medicine, and theology, and these lead to master's and doctor's degrees, over a period of up to twelve years. Clearly, a weakness of the universities of the time was that education was limited, and another was that it was lengthy.Many of the universities were private organizations, however, and though they were subject to the Church's authority, they were no more so than anyone else was. This meant that the universities were much freer that monastic schools both in what they taught and in how they taught it. It also meant that the universities were rather free to evolve.There are links below.
None Graduated 2011, I now have to do everything over again to get my bachelors another 5 years of school, not including possibility of a waiting list.
This is a recognized University having 11 Universities and 8 B-Schools all over India imparting education with quality from more than 20 years.
Many universities will allow you to do it, though you may need to jump through some hoops first.
Merritt Madison Chambers has written: 'Current bibliography of higher education in other nations' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Education, Higher, Higher Education 'Nine years of Grapevine' -- subject(s): Government aid to higher education, State Taxation, Taxation, State 'Higher education' -- subject(s): Finance, Universities and colleges