08-03-2024, 01:41 AM
(This post was last modified: 08-03-2024, 02:00 AM by FireMedic_Philosopher.
Edit Reason: grammar and cleanliness
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(07-30-2024, 06:26 PM)Ariadne Wrote: I am wondering how it works when you want to get degrees in different subjects or areas. If I have my Associate's degree, can I get another one if I feel like it and how would I go about that? Does it use the same base education credits that the first one used? The same question for Bachelor's; does it depend on the school? Will one school allow you to do a second Bachelor's and do they use many of the base credits for the second or third degrees?In the US generally your general education credits - introduction level freshman and sophomore classes- will transfer.... So generally you won't be repeating them.
I'm not looking at it from the perspective of using these for work, but just for the love and joy of learning and I've been impressed by many of the members here who have many degrees. How do you do it?
Thanks!
You will be required to complete all the "major" required classes for each degree. For example, you won't be taking Freshman math again, but you will have to take any courses the new degree requires that you have not already completed.
Now three " yeah buts..."
1) every college has a minimum number of classes you must do at that college in order to graduate. So... if you transfer to a new university, even if your program only has 20 new credits, but the school requires 25 or 30 to be done "in house" you will still have to do the extra courses.
2) some colleges only let you earn one degree at a time... so you can't graduate with a BS, a BA, and a BFA simultaneously. You may have to do them one by one.
Some schools do let you "double major" that is, complete all the coursework for two programs, but will only issue you a single diploma. The courses WILL be noted on the transcript though.
3) Some schools do not accept transfer credit if those classes were part of a completed degree. In other words, they would only count classes that were not part of a finished degree. Graduate schools are notorious for this. For example nothing from my MS could count toward my MBA... I had to do it all.
That said, there are no "gen eds" at the masters level, though some classes from degree "A" might turn out to be pre-requisites of degree "B" ...and in that limited case the class might be waived at the new school. But that is a case by case event.
All in all I have multiple degrees, from the associate level through to the masters level. This includes an AA(History) AS (life sciences) AAS (Emergency Medicine/Paramedic) and ALS (philosophy) all from the same community college... simply because I love to learn. Only the AAS was career oriented.
The original AAS took two years (5 semesters) of full time work... Once that was done the others each took two semesters to finish, while working and taking classes part time.
I went to get my BS at a school across the state. My state says they didn't HAVE to accept my credits... and they didn't accept any of my 100+ undergrad credits for transfer. I did another solid four years to get my BS, where I was a double major... so two programs, but only one diploma.
It kinda sucks you don't get two diplomas...but if I had done one then another back to back I "could have" except no one told me at the time...
My MS meant nothing credit wise when I went after my next degree, but it did mean I could skip the GRE entrance exam.
My masters level work is not helping me at the PhD level, other than being a checked box on the application, since a masters of some sort is a pre-req... but it doesn't matter "what" it is.
ymmv
Associates in: EMS, History, and Philosophy
Certificates in: Military History and Quality Assurance
B.S. in: Emergency Management and Healthcare Admin
M.S. in: Public Safety Administration
In Progress:
Graduate Certificate in: National Security
Looking into doctoral programs