You can do a bachelor’s in college? Not here. College is typically only two year programs.
Comment on What does a PhD mean?
fossilesque@mander.xyz 1 year agoCollege is what you put into it. A lot of people don’t get into the networking side of it because it’s never really introduced to them. Mostly professors look for those who are “turned on” to bring onto projects like that.
fruitSnackSupreme@lemmy.world 1 year ago
fossilesque@mander.xyz 1 year ago
College and university are relatively interchangable in American English.
MudMan@kbin.social 1 year ago
Well, not really over here. You do have to do a bunch of hands-on stuff for credits. Can't even replace those with more standard subjects.
You can absolutely wing it past all five years, depending on your degree, but between mandatory projects and internships you have to try really hard to not get some level of expertise in the field.
Plus, university curriculums have specializations here, so you get mandatory courses on pretty narrow subjects whether you like it or not. So... I guess there are some differences, maybe? I was pissed when they announced they'd do that masters' thing here because the price of tuition for that year goes from being a couple hundred to a few thousand for basically the same curriculum, but this is definitely not the first time I notice that the anglosphere assumes there's a huge difference between the two things.
fossilesque@mander.xyz 1 year ago
The UK system is a bit better about those kinds of things, courses tend to be modular. The American system is a lot different and scheduled like high school, but that may have changed since I was in it.