I remember reading way back some article on this.
Is it possible?
Have only capstone left to complete and then on to graduate programs.
At first wanted to get a grad certificate if it is worth having. With only 12 credits feels doable. But I remembered reading of students bypassing the masters and wondered how it can be done.
•
Posts: 794
Threads: 22
Likes Received: 227 in 153 posts
Likes Given: 10
Joined: Sep 2018
02-11-2021, 02:05 AM
(This post was last modified: 02-11-2021, 02:10 AM by Supermind.)
You don’t actually bypass a Master’s. Some universities offer an integrated Master’s + PhD program that extends for 4-5 years. But after 2 years in the integrated program, upon successfully completing the requirements, you may apply for a Master’s degree. The difference is that you are not enrolling for a terminal Master’s degree program; the terminal degree is a PhD in such cases. Many Ivy League Grad schools typically offer such integrated programs for Psychology.
TESU BALS-Psych. + ASNSM(Math)
TEEX(6): Cybersec. 101/201/301
The Institutes(2): Ethics
Sophia(2): Ess. Of Managing Conflict, Dev. Effective Teams
NFA(1): Comm. Safety Edu.
GED(10): NAS-131, SOC-273, MAT-121, HUM-101 (1)
Study.com(75): Intro to Psych., Soc. Psych.-1, Growth & Dev. Psych., Personality Psych., History & Systems of Psych., Org. Theory, Library Science, Comm. at Workplace, Intro to World Religion, I/O Psych., Ethics in Soc. Sc., Org. Comm., Eng. 104, Eng. 105, History of Vietnam war, Sp. Ed. History & Law, Diff. Ed., Classroom Mgmt., Foundations of Ed., Abnormal Psych., Rsch. methods in Psych., College Math, Intro. to Geometry., Calculus (6).
Saylor (15): Intro. to Mol. & Cellular Bio., Comp. Politics, Corporate Comm., Env. Ethics, Principles of Comm.
TESU (1): Cornerstone, Lib. 495 Capstone.
CSM (3): Quant. reasoning.
Aleks (6): Trigonometry, Intro to Statistics.
MS-Psychology; Walden University
GPA: 4/4
Posts: 266
Threads: 56
Likes Received: 135 in 86 posts
Likes Given: 0
Joined: May 2015
just do a PhD from a UK university ?
it's 3 years.
Posts: 794
Threads: 22
Likes Received: 227 in 153 posts
Likes Given: 10
Joined: Sep 2018
(02-11-2021, 03:39 AM)nyvrem Wrote: just do a PhD from a UK university ?
it's 3 years. To the best of my knowledge, a Master’s degree is required to enroll in such programs.
TESU BALS-Psych. + ASNSM(Math)
TEEX(6): Cybersec. 101/201/301
The Institutes(2): Ethics
Sophia(2): Ess. Of Managing Conflict, Dev. Effective Teams
NFA(1): Comm. Safety Edu.
GED(10): NAS-131, SOC-273, MAT-121, HUM-101 (1)
Study.com(75): Intro to Psych., Soc. Psych.-1, Growth & Dev. Psych., Personality Psych., History & Systems of Psych., Org. Theory, Library Science, Comm. at Workplace, Intro to World Religion, I/O Psych., Ethics in Soc. Sc., Org. Comm., Eng. 104, Eng. 105, History of Vietnam war, Sp. Ed. History & Law, Diff. Ed., Classroom Mgmt., Foundations of Ed., Abnormal Psych., Rsch. methods in Psych., College Math, Intro. to Geometry., Calculus (6).
Saylor (15): Intro. to Mol. & Cellular Bio., Comp. Politics, Corporate Comm., Env. Ethics, Principles of Comm.
TESU (1): Cornerstone, Lib. 495 Capstone.
CSM (3): Quant. reasoning.
Aleks (6): Trigonometry, Intro to Statistics.
MS-Psychology; Walden University
GPA: 4/4
Posts: 266
Threads: 56
Likes Received: 135 in 86 posts
Likes Given: 0
Joined: May 2015
Quote:Entry requirements
You must hold a UK undergraduate (Bachelor's) degree with at least First Class or Upper Second-Class honours or an equivalent qualification from a recognised overseas institution.
From the U of Leicester website. (just took it off their Management PhD page, theres other fields as well)
Also from the U of Leicester website.
Quote:International Distance Learning
- Starting in 2020/21 academic year: £24,930 (Total course fee)
that's around 35k USD for the whole program
https://le.ac.uk/study/research-degrees/...management
•
Posts: 1,340
Threads: 388
Likes Received: 494 in 343 posts
Likes Given: 0
Joined: Jan 2021
I think there is another factor at play here, regardless of whether you are applying to a US or a British program. Many of these programs have competitive admissions. There are a limited number of open slots. This is common in PhD programs because each candidate must have a doctoral advisor, a committee, etc. While the admissions criteria may not state explicitly that a Masters is required for admission to the Doctoral program, if you apply with just a Bachelors you may find yourself going head to head with a bunch of people who already have grad degrees. In that case there may need to be something very special about you or your degree/university in order to win that competition and be awarded a slot.
•
Posts: 297
Threads: 3
Likes Received: 190 in 110 posts
Likes Given: 0
Joined: May 2020
02-11-2021, 08:50 AM
(This post was last modified: 02-11-2021, 08:51 AM by innen_oda.)
(02-11-2021, 12:08 AM)Seagull Wrote: I remember reading way back some article on this.
Is it possible?
Have only capstone left to complete and then on to graduate programs.
At first wanted to get a grad certificate if it is worth having. With only 12 credits feels doable. But I remembered reading of students bypassing the masters and wondered how it can be done.
Seagull, sorry you got such bad advice in this thread.
In the UK (and Australia), 'bypassing' a master degree is quite typical and wouldn't even raise an eyebrow. (In fact, it wouldn't even be seen as 'bypassing'; rather, the master pathway is bypassing the typical route, for those without the grades for honours.)
Bachelor degrees are generally 3 years. Honours is 1 year. Master degrees are 1-2 years. PhDs are . . . well, however long it takes you.
So if you want to do a PhD, you have two main options:
Bachelor + honours. (3 years plus 1 year)
Bachelor + masters. (3 years plus 1-2 years)
The honours pathway is more competitive because it's generally more respected (or perhaps it's the other way around!). Getting into a master's degree is a little bit easier, particularly if you stuff up a bit during your undergrad years and don't have the GPA necessary (grad certs and grad dips are frequently open to anyone with an bachelor degree, for example).
Remember that US undergrad degrees and UK undergrad degrees are quite different in structure. In the UK, your bachelor is 3 years of full specialisation in the subject matter (with a few elective subjects), while in the US, the first two years are gen eds, and then 'only' two years of specialised study. So where Americans are doing specialisation in their Masters, much of the rest of the Anglo world has done that specialisation already in their honours undergrad.
Posts: 8,343
Threads: 91
Likes Received: 3,486 in 2,495 posts
Likes Given: 4,109
Joined: May 2020
02-11-2021, 12:34 PM
(This post was last modified: 02-11-2021, 12:34 PM by ss20ts.)
Totally depends on the school and program. Many PhD programs in the US aren't even open to you without a master's degree. The master's degree is quite often a requirement for admission. Frequently, you're even limited in what the master's can be in. Like I can't apply for a PhD program in history with a master's degree in mechanical engineering because I wouldn't have the required master's level history courses to catapult into the PhD program which is the next level.
•
Posts: 148
Threads: 14
Likes Received: 109 in 57 posts
Likes Given: 86
Joined: Feb 2018
It is possible but, your best bet for this type situation is the school your getting your bs/ba at. Like many have said technically you don't bypass it you just earn it along the way. I live in a metro area with large college with a big phd/md/dds program and I have heard a lot of folks tell their sob stories of washing out of a program and walking away with a masters.
*this is based on my experience in the US
COSC AS 2019 - completed
COSC BSBA 2020 - completed
Cumberland School of Law M.S.L 2022 - completed
UA - MS Hospitality Management 2024 - completed
WWU - DBA 2026 - in progress
#GOACORNS
#GOBULLDOGS
#ROLLTIDE
•
Posts: 3,505
Threads: 136
Likes Received: 643 in 506 posts
Likes Given: 918
Joined: Mar 2017
Might be best to do a competency-based Masters. Versus trying to do a combined program where it is all slower traditional classes.
•
|