Bachelor Masters Degree
Nowadays, we live by the principle that knowledge is power. This is the reason why most of the time, companies are after your diploma or certificate whenever you look for a job. Once you get hired, your weapon for advancement is still your degree or your higher educational attainment.
Speaking of degrees, most education systems have a bachelors degree followed by a masters degree if the student would prefer so. Typically, a bachelor's degree is an undergraduate educational program that you take for three to six years depending on the course. (2) This serves as your foundation towards your chosen career. (3) Once you earn it, you have two options: apply for a job or invest in postgraduate education. But does the same sequence of events still apply nowadays? The answer is, yes, of course. Most educational institutions still have the bachelors-degree-then-the-masters system. However, students do have the option now, to either follow that hierarchy, or get a bachelor masters or a masters bachelors degree program.
Now isn't that weird? A bachelor masters degree program is meant for a student who wants to avail of a masters program while enrolled in undergraduate school. A masters bachelors degree program, on the other hand, is for students who wish to take a bachelors degree, possibly a second bachelors degree, while enrolled as a postgraduate.
Still confused? Here are some trivias about combined bachelors and masters degree programs that can help you understand everything: (1)
* Bachelors masters students fulfill only half the workload and the number of hours required for a masters degree program while they are enrolled in a bachelors degree program, but they get to satisfy all the requisites for a postgraduate degree.
* Students in a bachelors or college degree program can enroll for masters once they get to second year. They also have the option to apply for it as late as their final year in college.
* To garner approval, you have to finish 60 to 90 credit semester hours in your bachelors program. Your grade point average or GPA also has to be at 3.0 or better. (1)
* If you failed to continue graduate schooling, the masters work that you have already fulfilled counts to your advantage.
Literary Citations & Article References:
1) http://gradstudies.fsu.edu/combined.html
