To get a PhD after completing a master's degree, you typically need to choose a research topic, find a supervisor, write a research proposal, conduct original research, write a dissertation, and defend your work in front of a committee. Additionally, you may need to pass comprehensive exams and fulfill any other program-specific requirements.
The certificate does not meet the course nor credit requirements of the master's degree.
In my opinion no is the answer. A Masters involves a lot of work (I have done NVQs prior to completing my degree and masters).
The GPA requirements to enter US universities for a Masters degree if you graduated from Lebanon are going to depend upon each university.
An Ed. S degree or Specialist in Education degree is a post masters degree that prepares the recipient for a central office role or superintendent's post for a school district. It is 30 to 40 hours shy of completing the requirements for the Ed. D or Doctorate of Education degree.
The requirements for a masters degree vary by college/university and by the type of program in which you enroll. University websites often list the requirements.
The PMP certificate is harder to get because of the professional requirements for candidates and because you need to have 7,500 hours leading and directing projects experience (with secondary degree). I would say that you need both the degree and the certificate.
Tax attorneys often get an Masters in the Letters of Law specializing in tax. That is after completing the JD degree.
When you "major" in something, you are typically a college undergraduate going towards an Associate or Bachelor's degree. When you are getting your masters, you have already "majored" in an area, graduated college, but are now in graduate school getting an advanced degree typically in the field you "majored" in while in college. A Masters degree is often a degree one gets before getting their PhD.When you "major" in something, you are typically a college undergraduate going towards an Associate or Bachelor's degree. When you are getting your masters, you have already "majored" in an area, graduated college, but are now in graduate school getting an advanced degree typically in the field you "majored" in while in college. A Masters degree is often a degree one gets before getting their PhD.
It is necessary to complete a three years Bachelors degree course before applying for a admission to a Masters degree
yes
If you mean starting your master's 10 years after completing your bachelors degree, yes! As long as you have completed a bachelor's degree, it doesn't matter how long you have been out of school. I started my masters 25 years after completing the bachelor's degree.
If you acquired a master's degree without completing a bachelor's degree, it tells me you acquired the degree from an illegitimate institution. The master's degree is advanced study that follows a bachelor's degree. I do not know of any legitimate school that would accept an individual into a graduate program without first completing a bachelor's degree.