It is not so much a question of better or not. It is a question of what your career goals and objectives are. For example, if you have a Bachelors degree in education and plan on staying in education, it would be appropriate to secure your Masters in the same or related field. If you have a Bachelors degree in education and now plan to seek employment in corporate management, then obviously a Masters in Organizational Management might be more appropriate. I all depends on what satisfies your goals and objectives.
Viper1
Yes you can, however you will need to complete your bachelors degree first.Yes you can, however you will need to complete your bachelors degree first.Yes you can, however you will need to complete your bachelors degree first.Yes you can, however you will need to complete your bachelors degree first.Yes you can, however you will need to complete your bachelors degree first.Yes you can, however you will need to complete your bachelors degree first.
The B-Arch is an undergraduate degree in architecture that can last up to five years. The B-Tech is a Bachelor of Technology and is a four year undergraduate degree.
It can infer the same level of training and education, but they are generally used differently. Professional training can mean a trade school instead of college, whereas, professional education is anything beyond a bachelors degree which would mean at least a masters degree.
Yes
Normally graduate degrees do not require undergraduate degrees in the same subject. However, you may have to take some specific undergraduate courses while pursuing your masters degree.
i thought laurea specialistica means bachelors degree (or maybe smth like среднее специальное) and laurea magistrale- masters degree. some sources say that both specialistica and magistrale means the same- masters degree. but i know that laurea (separately) is similar to "winner" (лауреат). winner of scholarship or grant for masters studies... this is not an exact answer maybe :))) but this is what i know
No, many individuals take their degrees at different colleges for many reasons. There is nothing wrong in this, and it is very common. This should not be a concern for you.
the same as a normal masters degree, 5 years
Sometimes you can get more financial aid if you do not yet have a degree. However, they ask for transcripts and those are going to say BA/BS awarded. The diploma is just something that you can hang. The problem with taking graduate classes as an undergrad is that you won't get the masters degree credit for those classes--you just did advanced work for your bachelors. I did about the same thing in taking graduate level courses in English for my English Lit degree--there was nothing to take to get a masters in the field!
The words "college" versus "university" can be confusing......especially in the US, where they can mean different things, depending on the state and/or the school(s) in question.It would be nice if things in the US were more like they are in the UK, when it comes to the difference between "college" and "university." In the UK, the university is the large, overall institution; and then each of its constituent parts are called colleges... like the University of London system.And in that (University of London) system, there is no difference: a masters degree is a masters degree.Gratefully, despite the less-clear difference between "college" and "university" in the US, a masters degree, regardless which kind of institution issues it, is the same, from either. A masters degree is a masters degree. Period.In pretty much all cases, a "masters" degree consists of from, typically, 32 to 48 graduate semester credit hours, beyond a 120 undergraduate-semester-credit-hour "bachelors" degree.Though the credits are calculated differently in the UK, it's still the same: first a bachelors degree, and then a masters degree; and it matters, not, whether it's from a school that calls itself a "college," or one that calls itself a "university." In either case, it's post-secondary, graduate-level higher-education that's immediatelly beyond the post-secondary undergraduate bachelors degree.
The exact same way someone without a bachelors degree does. With an application.
No. They are considered to grant the subject a Mastery of a field, but are not considered a "Professional Degree". Law, Medicine, Dentistry, Theology, Veterinary Medicine and Pharmacy are considered doctoral professional degrees, because they allow for practice in a profession.