Completing a PhD in just 2 years is extremely challenging and rare. To do so, you would need to have a clear research focus, work efficiently, have strong support from your advisor and committee, and be prepared to dedicate a significant amount of time and effort to your studies. It would also require exceptional time management skills and the ability to work diligently and effectively towards your research goals.
If you are asking about a medical doctor it is 12+ years. For a PhD it is 4-5 years for a BA/BS, 2 for a MA/MS and 3-7 years to complete a PhD.
8 to 10 years. A BS/BA is 4 years, MA/MS 2 years and the PhD is 3-7 years. Most PhD programs give candidates 7 years to complete the degree. The first 2 years is course work for the area of expertise and a dissertation is required to finish the degree. It took me nearly 2 years of writing to complete the dissertation.
A master's degree is a graduate-level academic qualification that typically takes 1-2 years to complete, while a PhD is a higher level of academic achievement that involves original research and can take 3-7 years to complete. A PhD is considered more advanced and specialized than a master's degree.
If you are asking about formal training, at least a PhD. So that means 4 years of college, and then 2 or more for a masters and 3-5 more for a PhD. Some people complete college in 3 years, and a few go directly to PhD programs. So it may be less.
I assume you are in the US but can only tell you what it is in australia. Basically you have to complete engineering bachelor which is 4 years, 5 with a double. Then do a masters, 1 to 2 years, then do your PhD which is usually 3 years. If you are going to do a PhD think why you want it. If you are into research then go ahead, it will go naturally but if you are just getting the title then I think you can spend the time a bit better on something else. =)
The PhD would take approximately four years post bachelor's to complete. The actual length of time depends much on how long it takes a student to prepare and defend their dissertation, which is an individual project on a topic of the students choosing from an original point of view with extensive research which must all be approved by the designated committee. Average years of PhD in American I believe is 10-12 years on average. 4 years for the bachelor. 4 years for the PhD. 2-4year extra for most people since they usual fail somewhere in pursuing the PhD. Median Age of students getting the PhD is 30 years old in America. In U.k,the PhD takes 7 years on average if you are successful in all your steps. 3(average) years for bachelors(honors).1 year for Master(or extra undergraduate year for research),3(average) years for PhD.Its not unheard of for someone to finish the PhD in 2 years or even less! *Note,unlike America PhD funding. 3 years is the norm in UK*(Most will be finished by the 3rd year)*
bachelors degree, 4 or 5 years masters degree, 1 or 2 years PhD degree, 4 to 6 years post-PhD in some cases, 1-3 years
You don't need one in journalism to be a good writer. It about 8 to 10 years in college from the BA to a PhD. Four for the BA, 2 for the MA, and another 3-4 years for the PhD. I am not sure if a PhD is even offered in journalism.
The minimum duration for the PhD and Msc courses are three years and 2 years, respectively.
4 Undergraduate 2 years for Masters in Marine Bio 6 for PhD
* Associates degree --- 2 years * Bachelors degree ---- 4 years * Masters degree ------ 5 years * PhD degree ----------- 8 years
First you get your undergrad; that is typically 4 years. Following this you get a masters that is typically 2 years. A PhD is granted when you demonstrate a complete mastery of a topic, it can be given quickly if you are very bright or never if you don't ever demonstrate the level of understanding required by your department. It's not a matter of going to university for a set number of years but the understanding and mastering of the subject.