answersLogoWhite

0

you could if you want to but it would take ahile.

User Avatar

Wiki User

16y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

How do I convert my Indian bachelors degree in ECTS?

use a calculator


If you hold an associate's degree does it get averaged into your bachlors degree?

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.


What are the uses of a baccalaureate?

A baccalaurteate is a Bachelors Degree (Ba); the use of the degree depends entirely on the the material that was studied and what job it is being applied to. For example a Bachelors Degree in Law is only useful if it is applied in a legal (and sometimes commercial field). You would not use it if you wanted to teach at elementary school, for that you would require a BA in elementary education or education.


How do you sign your name when you have a masters degree and bachelors and want to use the degree suffixes?

Wolfgang Schwartzschild MA BA -- if they are arts degrees Wolfgang Schwartzschild MSc BSc -- if they are science degrees


What careers can a bachelor of science degree be use for?

"A bachelors degree in science can be used for a variety of jobs. You could land a job in a laboratory, and you could also substitute for schools in science teaching positions."


Can i obtain my bachelors of science in criminal justice in the US and move to Russia and still use my degree there?

You don't "use" a degree - you are awarded one by a University. If you mean "will Russia recognise a BSc awarded by a US University" then that's a different question.


What is the highest paid bachelor's degree?

There really isn't a highest paying bachelors degree. How much you can earn will depend on you and how you use your accumulated knowledge, your critical thinking skills, expertise, assertiveness, attitude, etc.


Is a college degree needed to understand how to use a w3 validator?

In order to understand the use of a w3 validator you would need to have at least a Bachelors degree in either Computer language and website building. w3 validators are used to make computer language cleaner between HTML based and XHTML.


Can you get a masters degree with an associate's degree?

Yes, it is possible to earn a master's degree with some undergrad work completed. Traditionally most people do earn a bachelors degree first and it depends if the school with accept you without the bachelors degree; however certain professions allows for it. For example in some countries you do not earn a bachelors degree in engineering, you go directly into a masters after completing the undergrad requirements. Why? because in some countries there is no such thing as a bachelors in engineering since it's a professional degree. [MsEng] Some medical schools also allow students who fulfilled most of the undergrad work to be accepted into graduate studies without the bachelor's. There is a masters degree path for executives that may not require undergrad degree called an Executive MBA. In summary, it really depends on the school to accept you without the undergrad degree and not someones personal opinion, so it is possible to do it. Many Americans are only use to the traditional educational paths, but there are many different paths in education. It's also common to list your highest degree obtained on your resume.


What is difference between BSN and BS in Nursing?

AnswerA BSN is a Bachelors degree in the Science of Nursing, and the MSN is a masters....Masters degree takes longer...in nursing you have ASN(Associate), BSN(Bachelors), and MSN(Masters)...hope this helps BSN is 4yrs of studying and MSN is 6yrs. BSN degree, you are the highest nurse and with MSN, you can see pts and even prescribe them Rx almost like a MD.Answer-BSN is Bachelor degree in Nursing will only get you so far in nursing field today while MSN is Master degree in nursing provides the chance to enhance the career. By MSN degree you can move into a senior or advanced practice position in nursing. Master's programs are just what registered nurses need to take their careers to the next level.


Can a bachelor's degree be obtained with prerequisite an associate of science degree in accounting?

Answer 1: The "Associate of Arts" (AA) degree is usually counted, by most bachelors degree programs, as equivalent to the entire first two (freshman and sophomore) years of the bachelors degree. So, then, a person with an AA could, theoretically, enter a BA program, get said AA counted as the first two years thereof, and then enter said BA program as a junior and finish just the junior and senior years, and, voila!, s/he has the bachelors degree.So the bottom line answer is, at least theoretically, two (2) years.However, some bachelors programs, after analyzing the AA degree, will declare that it is deficient in some of what's called "lower division general education" (LDGE). All associates and bachelors programs contain up to 45 semester credit hours of pretty much the same LDGE; but some bachelors programs require slightly different amounts of LDGE, in slightly different areas, than do some associates programs. And so it's possible for someone with an AA degree to use it to enter a bachelors program, and said bachelors program will make the AA degree holder take a course or two or three of LDGE in order to make-up whatever is the deficiency. If so, then the AA degree holder would first need to do that, and only then enter the bachelors program at a junior. If that happens, then finishing the bachelors may take two years, plus maybe a summer session or something like that.Additionally, a bachelors degree in accounting is a specialist degree, usually intended to prepare the graduate for sitting for a state CPA exam and licensure as a certified public accountant (CPA). Such degrees usually require additional amounts of math; and many AA degrees contain only one math course (typically something like "College Algebra" or "College Mathematics" or something like that. Someone with an accounting degree is usually required to have taken that, plus at least calculus... maybe even trigonometry... and definitely statistics.So, then, an AA holder might even end-up taking an additional whole semester, in addition to the junior and senior years, in order to get a bachelors in accounting. It would all just depend on how the accounting degree's requirements and standards, which tend to vary from schools to school.


Does one get Graduate Diploma by special entry without having bachelor's degree In USA?

The US tends not to have "graduate diplomas by special entry." In the US, graduate work may typically not be begun until and unless all requisite undergraduate work is completed... and that usually means a bachelors degree.And so, then, in the US, one may not, for example, typically, enter a graduate either certificate (typically 12 to 18 semester credit hours in length), or masters degree (typically 32 to 48 semester credit hours in length) program until and unless one has completed one's undergraduate bachelors degree.But you mention a "graduate diploma," and the US tends not to have such things. But the UK has, at least in the past. In the UK, though, the whole certificate, then diploma, then degree thing is very different than it is in the US. For the benefit of those in the US who read this......a bachelors degree in the UK is typically only three years long (as opposed to the US's typical four-year-long bachelors degrees). And though this is an oversimplification, the reason is because the "lower division general education" (LDGE) that is typically found in the first year to year-and-a-half of a typical four-year US bachelors degree is covered in the UK by a thing called "GCE" or "GCSE" or "A-levels" or "O-levels," which are all courses which students take during or after high school, but before college. And so by the time the student enters a bachelors program in the UK, s/he has obtained the LDGE coursework that we, in the US, put into the first of the four years of the bachelors.The UK's system is kinda' better, in some ways, though, because even though the bachelors degree in the UK is only three years long, nearly every minute of it involves courses in whatever is the degree's major. A typical US four-year bachelors includes not only the LDGE, but also general electives, in addition to courses in the major. And if the US bachelors degree holder further dilutes the coursework in the major by adding coursework in a minor, then the US bachelors degree holder ends-up with actually less coursework in the major than do bachelors degree holders in the UK. And so it's fair to say that a UK three-year bachelors degree holder might (and I stress that word, because it all just depends on a lot of factors) be more learned in whatever is the UK degree's major than is the typical US four-year bachelors degree holder learned in whatever is his/her US bachelors degree's major.In any case, a person who enters a UK bachelors program, but who leaves it after completing only one year, gets a "certificate" in whatever is the UK bachelors degree's major. And if they leave the three-year bachelors program after only two years, then they get a "diploma" in it. Only if they stay all three years do they get the full bachelors degree in whatever is the major.Much the same thing is often true in the UK about its two-year masters programs. If they leave it after only a year, they get a "diploma" in whatever is the masters degree's major; and if they stay for the entire two years, then they get the actual masters degree. There are even some three-year masters in the UK which use the same "certificate" or "diploma" or "degree" plan as the UK bachelors degrees.We, in the US, have no equivalent to any of that. In the US, we have two-year associates degrees, four-year bachelors degrees (toward which the two-year associates can count for half), and two- or three-year (sometimes longer) masters degrees (and then, after that, doctoral-level graduate degrees). We also have both pre- and post-baccalaureate certificate programs, and graduate certificate programs. That's it. No diplomas. In the US, one's "diploma" is that which s/he got from his/her high school. My having written that, though, I'm sure someone will be able to think of a US school that offers "diplomas," but, seriously, those are rare. And they don't mean the same thing as what a "diploma" means in the US, in any case.The UK does, indeed, have "special entry" provisions for some of its educational credentials that could allow a person to obtain a graduate credential without having first gotten an undergradate one; however, that sort of thing varies greatly from school to school; and the QAA (the UK's educational quality assurance agency) is stronglly discouraging it except for a few special circumstances wherein a well-known graduate credential has always, by design, and from its outset, been available to even those with no undergraduate credentials... such as Heriot-Watt University's MBA, for example, just to name one.In the US, though, getting graduate-level credit or any kind before one has fully completed one's undergraduate work (in other words, before one has completely one's bachelors degree) is just so, so, so uncommon. It would have to be a very special circumstance, indeed! Most self-respecting graduate schools wouldn't even consider it.Someone reading this may be able to think of some exceptional school somewhere that allows it.