ඉතිහාසය
අනෙකුත් රැකියා මෙන්ම ගුරු වෘත්තිය සදහාද නිසි අධ්යාපනය හා පුහුණුව ලද පුද්ගලයන් තෝරා ගැනීමට රජය මෙන්ම පෞද්ගලික අධ්යාපන ආයතන වගබලා ගනී.ඒ සුදුසුකම් අතර උපාධියක් හිමි ගුරුවරුන් සදහා විශේෂ ස්ථානයක් හිමිවේ.උපාධි පිරිනැමීමද සිදුවන්නේ උසස් අධ්යාපන ආයතන මගිනි.ශීෂ්යයෙකු විදුහලකට ඇතුලත් කර පසු පිළිවෙලින් නියමිත ශේණීන්ටඅදාල විභාග සමත්වීමෙන් පසු ඉහළම අධ්යාපන සුදුසුකම් ලැබූ සිසුන් උපාධි සදහා තෝරාගනු ලැබේ.මෙසේ උපාධි පිරිනැමීම අතීතයේ සිට සිදුවිය.
අතීතයේ පැවති උසස් අධ්යාපන ආයතන ලෙස තක්ෂිලා නාලන්දා වික්රමශීලා ජගද්දලා වැනි ආයතන දැක්විය හැක.මෙම උසස් අධ්යාපන ආයතන තුල ඉතා සාර්ථක ලෙස ඉගෙනීම් කටයුතු සිදුකරඇති බව ඉතිහාසඥයන් පෙන්වා දෙයි.අතීතයේ රජ කුමාරවරුන් තක්ෂිලාව නම් විද්යස්ථානයකින් ශිල්ප හැදෑරූ බවත් ඔවුන්ට දක්ෂතා මත විවිධ නම්බු නාම පිරිනැමූ බවත් පන්සිය පනස් ජාතක පොත වැනි මූලාශ්රවල දැක්වේ.14 හා 15 වන සියවසයන්හිදී නාලන්නා වික්රමශීලා ජගද්දලා වැනි විශ්ව විද්යාල ඉන්දියාව තුල පැවති ඉතා ප්රකට විශ්ව විද්යාලවිය.මෙයිනුත් නාලන්දා විශ්ව විද්යාලය ප්රමුඛ විය.නාලන්දා විශ්ව විද්යාලය සතුව ඉතා විශාල හා උසින් වැඩි ගොඩනැගිලි පිහිටා ඇත.මෙම විශ්ව විද්යාල තුල වැඩි වශයෙන් මහායාන බුදු දහම හා වෙනත් බොහෝ විෂයන් අධ්යනය කර ඇත.මෙම විශ්ව විද්යාල පසුව ඉන්දියාවට පැමිනි මුස්ළිම් ආක්රමණිකයන් විසින් ගිනිතබා විනාශ කරනලදී.මෙම විශ්ව විද්යාල තුල පැවති වටිනා පුස්ථක මාස හයක් පුරාවට ගිනිගෙන දැවුන බව පැවසේ.
The origins of the doctorate in particular dates back to the attadris wa 'l-ifttd ("license to teach and issue legal opinions") in the medieval , which was equivalent to the qualification and was developed during the 9th century after the formation of the legal schools. To obtain a doctorate, a student "had to study in a , usually four years for the basic course" and at least ten years for a course. The "doctorate was obtained after an oral to determine the originality of the candidate's ", and to test the student's "ability to defend them against all objections, in set up for the purpose" which were scholarly exercises practiced throughout the student's "career as a graduate ." After students completed their post-graduate education, they were awarded doctorates giving them the status of (meaning ""), (meaning "professor of ") and mudarris (meaning "teacher"), which were later translated into Latin as , and respectively.
In the , candidates who had completed three or four years of study in the prescribed texts of the (grammar, rhetoric, and logic), and the quadrivium (mathematics, geometry, astronomy and music), together known as the , and who had successfully passed examinations held by their masters, would be admitted to the degree of , from the Latin [baccalaureus] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (), a term previously usually used of a squire (i.e., apprentice) to a knight. Further study, and in particular successful participation in and then moderating of would earn one the degree, from the Latin , teacher, entitling one to teach these subjects. Masters of Arts were eligible to enter study under the "higher faculties" of Law, Medicine or Theology, and earn first a bachelor's and then master's or doctor's degrees in these subjects. Thus a degree was only a step on the way to becoming a fully qualified master – hence the English word "graduate", which is based on the Latin [gradus] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup () ("step").
Today the terms "master", "doctor" (from the Latin - meaning literally: "teacher") and "professor" signify different levels of academic achievement, but in the Medieval university they were equivalent terms, the use of them in the degree name being a matter of custom at a university. (Most universities conferred the Master of Arts but, for instance, the highest degree was variously termed Master of Theology/ Divinity or Doctor of Theology/ Divinity depending on the place).
The earliest doctoral degrees (theology - Divinitatis Doctor (D.D.), philosophy - Doctor of philosophy (D.Phil., Ph.D.) and medicine - Medicinæ Doctor (M.D., D.M.)) reflected the historical separation of all University study into these three fields. Over time the D.D. has gradually become less common and studies outside theology and medicine have become more common (such studies were then called "philosophy", but are now classified as sciences and humanities - however this usage survives in the degree of Doctor of Philosophy).
The in Italy, regarded as the oldest university in Europe, was the first institution to confer the degree of Doctor in Civil Law in the late 12th century; it also conferred similar degrees in other subjects, including වෛද්ය විද්යාව. The used the term master for its graduates, a practice adopted by the English universities of Oxford and Cambridge, as well as the ancient Scottish universities of , , , and Edinburgh.
The naming of degrees eventually became linked with the subjects studied. Scholars in the faculties of or became known as "masters", but those in , medicine, and law were known as "doctor". As study in the arts or in grammar was a necessary prerequisite to study in subjects such as theology, medicine and law, the degree of doctor assumed a higher status than the . This led to the modern hierarchy in which the Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), which in its present form as a degree based on research and dissertation is a development from 18th and 19th Century German universities, is a more advanced degree than the (M.A.). The practice of using the term doctor for all advanced degrees developed within German universities and spread across the academic world.
The French terminology is tied closely to the original meanings of the terms. The (cf. "bachelor") is conferred upon French students who have successfully completed their and admits the student to university. When students graduate from university, they are awarded licence, much as the teaching guilds would have done, and they are qualified to teach in secondary schools or proceed to higher-level studies.
In the past, degrees have also been directly issued by authority of the monarch or by a bishop, rather than any educational institution. This practice has mostly died out. In Britain, are still awarded by the Archbishop of Canterbury.
In most countries, gaining an academic degree entitles the holder to assume distinctive particular to the awarding institution. Academic dress is like a uniform or insignia identifying the status of the individual wearing them.
නිදර්ශන
Some examples of specific degrees follow each general term. For more information, see the article about the general term.
- : AA (Associate in Arts), AS (Associate in Science), AAS (Associate in Applied Science), AGS (Associate in General Studies)
- : or , , , or or or , , , , , , , , , , ,
- : , , , , , MCM, , , MPS, , , , , , , or , , , ,
- :
- : , ,
- : , ,
- 's degree:
- : , , , , , , ,
- Professional Doctoral degrees: or , , , , , , , , , M.Div., M.D., , , , , , , , , (UK),
- Research Doctoral degrees: , Ph.D., , , , , , , (Germany), , , , or , or or , , or , , M.D.,
Abbreviations for degrees can place the level either before or after the faculty or discipline, depending on the institution. For example, DSc and ScD both stand for the (higher) doctorate in science. Various other abbreviations also vary between institutions, for instance BS and BSc both stand for 'Bachelor of Science'.
There are various conventions for indicating degrees and diplomas after one's name. In some cultures it is usual to give only the highest degree. In others, it is usual to give the full sequence, in some cases giving abbreviations also for the discipline, the institution, and (where it applies) the level of honours. In another variation, a 'rule of subsumption' often shortens the list and may obscure the chronology evident from a full listing. Thus 'MSc BA' means that the degrees conferred were - in chronological order - BSc, BA, MSc. The subsumption rule reflects the principle that a person of a given high status does not separately belong to the lower status.
For member institutions of the , there is a standard list of abbreviations, but in practice many variations are used. Most notable is the use of the Latin abbreviations 'Oxon.' and 'Cantab.' for the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, in spite of these having been superseded by (little used) English 'Oxf.' and 'Camb.' Other Latin abbreviations include St And. for the , Exon. for the , Dunelm. for , Ebor. for the and Cantuar. for the (formerly the "University of Kent at Canterbury"). Confusion results from the widespread use of 'SA' for the University of South Australia (instead of S.Aust.) because 'SA' was officially assigned to the University of South Africa. For universities of different commonwealth countries sharing the same name, such as York University in Canada and the University of York in the UK, a convention has been adopted where a country abbreviation is included with the letters and university name. In this example, 'York (Can.)' and 'York (UK)' is commonly used to denote degrees conferred by their respective universities.
The doubling of letters in LL.B., LL.M., LL.D. is because these degrees are in laws, not law. The doubled letter indicates the Latin plural (genitive case) legum as opposed to the singular (genitive case) legis. Abbreviations for the degrees in surgery Ch. B. and Ch. M. are from Latin chiruguriae and often indicate a university system patterned after Scottish models. The combination of M.B. with Ch. B. arose from a need to graduate the students at the time of year allocated to graduation rituals, but the legal inability to confer the M.B. before they had been properly approved by professional regulatory bodies. Thus the Ch. B. was conferred first, and the M.B. was conferred later, after registration, and without ceremony. In recent times the two have come to be conferred together and are widely (mis)understood to constitute a single degree.
Some degrees are awarded jure dignitatis. That is, a person who has demonstrated the appropriate qualities to be given a particular office may be awarded the degree by virtue of the office held. It is another kind of earned—but not strictly academic—degree.
ප්රදේශයන් අනුව උපාධි ක්රියාපිළිවෙල
උතුරු හා දකුණු ඇමරිකාව
බ්රසීලය
Undergraduate students in Brazilian universities normally graduate either with a Bacharel degree (equivalent to an American or ) or with a professional degree (roughly modeled on the old German ).
Bacharel degrees are awarded in most fields of study in the arts, humanities, social sciences, mathematics, or natural sciences and normally take four years to complete (some degrees, as in Law, require an extra fifth year to be obtained). Professional degrees are awarded in state-regulated professions such as architecture, engineering, psychology, pharmacy, dental medicine, veterinary medicine, or human medicine and are named after the profession itself, i.e. one graduates with a degree of Engenheiro (engineer), Arquiteto (architect), or Médico (physician/surgeon) for example. Professional degrees are generally regarded as being of higher social standing than a Bacharel degree and are considered more academically demanding. A typical course of study leading to a first professional degree in Brazil normally takes five years of full-time study to complete, with the exception of the human medicine course which requires six years.
In addition to the standard Bacharel and professional degrees, Brazilian universities also offer the Licenciatura degree, available for students who want to qualify as teachers. Licenciatura courses exist mostly in mathematics, humanities, and natural sciences. Although Licenciatura courses also last 4 years, they are nonetheless considered to be of lower standing than a Bacharelado course. A lower degree of Tecnólogo (Technologist) is also available in technology-related fields and can be normally obtained in three years only.
Admission as an undergraduate student in most top public or private universities in Brazil requires that the applicant pass a competitive entrance examination known as . Contrary to what happens in the United States, candidates must declare their intended university major when they register for the Vestibular. Although it is theoretically possible to switch majors afterwards (in a process known within the universities as transferência interna), that is actually quite rare in Brazil. Undergraduate curricula tend to be more rigid than in the United States and there is little room to take classes outside one's major.
Individuals who hold either a Bacharel degree, a professional diploma or Licenciatura are eligible for admission into courses leading to advanced 's or doctor's degrees. Criteria for admission into master's and doctor's programs vary in Brazil. Some universities require that candidates take entrance exams; others make admission decisions based solely on undergraduate transcripts, letters of recommendation, and possibly oral interviews. In most cases however, especially for the doctorate, the candidate is required to submit a research plan and one faculty member must agree to serve as his/her supervisor before the candidate can be admitted into the program; The exception are the post-graduate programs, that accepts students with very broad and/or vague research prospects (sometimes the prospect is given in promptu during the interview), preferring to let the students define their study program and advisor in the course of the first year of studies.
Master's degrees normally take two years to obtain and are classified into academic master's degrees or professional master's degrees. Requirements for an academic master's degree normally include taking a minimum number of advanced graduate classes (typically between five and eight) and submitting a research thesis which is examined orally by a panel of at least two examiners (three is the preferred number), sometimes including one external member who must be from another university or research institute; The emphasis of the thesis must be in its clarity and ease of understanding by future students, not in its originality. Professional master's degrees on the other hand normally involve taking a larger number of classes, and, in the case of engineering programs in particular, often completing a project as an intern in an engineering company and submitting a final project report. The most relevant difference to the international scenario is that, due to restrictive production goals set by government agencies, in most universities a Master degree is not only considered inferior to a Doctor degree but a pre-requisite for the admission in a Doctorate program.
Master's titles in Brazil normally include an explicit reference to the field of study in which they were awarded, e.g. one graduates with a degree of Mestre em Engenharia (Master of Engineering), Mestre em Economia (Master of Economics), and so on. The generic title Mestre em Ciências (Master of Sciences) is used sometimes though, especially in the natural sciences (physics, biology, chemistry, etc.). The word profissional is normally added to the title to distinguish it from an academic master's degree, e.g. Mestre Profissional em Engenharia Aeronáutica (Professional Master in Aeronautical Engineering).
Doctor's degrees on the other hand normally take four additional years of full-time study to complete and are of a higher standing than a master's degree; With very few exceptions (namely, people with outstanding accomplishments in research), a Master degree or equivalent is required for admission in a Doctorate Program. Requirements for obtaining a doctor's degree include taking additional advanced courses, passing an oral qualifying exam, and submitting a longer doctoral dissertation which must represent a significant original contribution to knowledge in the field to which the dissertation topic is related. That contrasts with master's theses, which, in addition to being usually shorter than doctoral dissertations, are not required to include creation of new knowledge or revision/reinterpretation of older views/theories. The doctoral dissertation is examined in a final oral exam before a panel of at least two members (in the state of São Paulo the preferred number is five, while the other regions prefer three members), usually including one or two external examiners from another university or research institute.
Conventions for naming doctoral degrees follow similar rules to those used for master's degree, i.e. an explicit reference to the field of study is normally included in the title itself, e.g. Doutor em Engenharia (Doctor of Engineering), Doutor em Direito (Doctor of Laws), Doutor em Economia (Doctor of Economics), etc., although a generic title like Doutor em Ciências (Doctor of Sciences) may be occasionally used.
Finally, a small number of Brazilian universities, most notably the public universities in the state of still award the title of Livre-Docente (free ), which is of higher standing than a doctorate and is obtained, similar to the German , by the submission of a second (original or cumulative) thesis and approval in a Livre-Docência examination that includes giving a public lecture before a panel of full professors.
කොළොම්බියාව
In Colombia, the system of degrees is a bit similar to the U.S. model. After completing their high school, or "bachillerato", students (called "bachilleres") can take one of two options. The first is called a "Profesional", which is similar to a Bachelor's Degree requiring from nine to eleven semesters of study according to the program chosen. The other option is called a "Técnico"; this degree only three years of study and prepares the student for technical or mechanical labors, similar to the associate's degree given in the U.S.
After this, students, now called "profesionales" or "técnicos", can opt for higher degrees. Formal education after the Bachelor's degree is the Master's degree with the title of "Magíster", and Doctorate's degree known as "Doctorado". The Master's degree has a normal duration of two years.
More commonly students prefer to take an specialization's degree, "Especialización", after their bachelor's degree rather than the more formal Master and Doctorate paths. This program is very popular in the country, because it requires only one year to complete and because the student only acquires the technical knowledge, without the bulk of the theoretical subjects.
A similar situation in Colombia, when compared to the U.S. system, is that the students may go directly to the "Doctorado" without having to take the "Master" or "Especialización".
චිලී
In Chile, the system in a nutshell is as follows: Quite similar to the case described for Colombia, students may opt to be "Profesionales"(Professionals) or "Técnicos"(Technicians). After completion of high school, students may follow professional or technical studies at Universities or Technical schools. Only Universities and the Academies of the Armed Forces can give Academic Degrees. In general, traditional professions require an Academic Degree, but there are many professions that not require the degree because they were conceived as strictly "professional" not academic. The degrees are as follows:
"Licenciado" it is similar to the Bachelor, but to get it is necessary to complete at least eight semesters of study on the subjects which are part of the Mayor. This degree is enough to continue developing an academic career, however, to get a professional title -which is not academic, but allows you to get a professional practice, you have to continue one or two additional years of study. (For example to be an engineer it is necessary to study four years to get a Licentiate in Engineering Sciences, and two additional years to get a Professional Title and become an engineer. Sometimes it is possible to take additional subjects and get a "Magister" degree besides the professional title.)
"Magister" is the equivalent to the Master degree in English speaking countries.
"Doctorado" is the equivalent to the Doctorate or Phd. There is no separate classification for Professional Doctorates.
In particular, the engineering profession may be complicated for the foreigner since there is two types of engineers: those who got an Academic Degree such as Civil Engineers or Armed Forced Politechnical Engineers, and those who are "Ingenieros en Ejecución" (Professional Engineers) which are considered technicians more focused to apply the engineering, and completed only four years of study. They are not able, by law, to authorise plans or drawings like engineers with a degree or architects.
එක්සත් රාජධානිය
In the United States, since the late 1800s, the threefold degree system of bachelor, master and doctor has been in place, but follows a slightly different pattern of study from the European equivalents.
In the United States, most standard academic programs are based on the four-year bachelor's degree (most often , B.A., or , B.S.), a one- or two-year master's degree (most often , M.A., or , M.S.; either of these programs might be as much as three years in length) and a further one or two years of coursework and research, culminating in comprehensive examinations in one or more fields, plus perhaps some teaching experience, and then the writing of a dissertation for the doctorate (most often , Ph.D. or other types such as Ed.D., Psy.D., Th.D.) for a total of ten or more years from starting the bachelor's degree (which is usually begun around age 18) to the awarding of the doctorate. This timetable is only approximate, however, as students in accelerated programs can sometimes earn a bachelor's degree in three years or, on the other hand, a particular dissertation project might take four or more years to complete. In addition, a graduate may wait an indeterminate time between degrees before candidacy in the next level, or even an additional degree at a level already completed. Therefore, there is no time-limit on the accumulation of academic degrees.
Some schools—mostly and , but some four-year schools as well—offer an for two full years of study, often in pre-professional areas. This may stand alone, or sometimes be used as credit toward completion of the four-year bachelor's degree.
In the United States, there is also another class of degrees called "." These degree programs are designed for professional practice in various fields rather than academic scholarship. Most professional degree programs require a prior bachelor's degree for admission (a notable exception being the PharmD program), and so represent at least about five total years of study and as many as seven or eight.
Some fields such as fine art, architecture, or divinity have chosen to name their first professional degree after the bachelor's a "master's degree" (e.g., , ) because most of these degrees require at least the completion of a bachelor's degree while the professional degrees in වෛද්ය විද්යාව (the or ) and law (the ) are doctorates. There is currently some debate in the architectural community to rename the degree to a "doctorate" in the manner that was done for the law degree decades ago. It is important to recognize that first-professional degrees in these fields are different from research-oriented degrees and comparisons to the Ph.D. are problematic.
ආසියාව හා ඔසියානාව
ඔස්ට්රේලියාව
In some countries, such as Australia, a diploma is a specific academic award in addition to that of Bachelor/Master's/Doctorate. Diplomas are usually signified by a rather than an academic hood, the latter being used only for those of graduate status. A person with a diploma is termed a diplomate.
Australia has several different kinds of diplomas: Diplomas, Advanced Diplomas, Graduate Diplomas and . The system is not without anomalies, due largely to the different traditions of individual institutions which the aims to regularise. A Diploma is usually equivalent to the first year of a Bachelor's degree, although a few have been similar to Bachelor of Arts degrees and permit direct admission to graduate programs.
An Australian Advanced Diploma is usually considered lower than a Bachelor degree, but may qualify its holder for advanced placement in a Bachelor program, direct admission to a Graduate Diploma course or (albeit rarely) direct admission to a Master's program.
Graduate Diplomas are always higher than a Bachelor degree, and usually require one year of full-time study. They are often an additional course taken after a standard Bachelor degree to introduce a specialization in a particular field or a new discipline. For example, Australian school teachers often study for a bachelor's degree in Arts or Science, then in an additional year complete requirements for a Graduate Diploma of Education, which qualifies them as school teachers. Some Graduate Diplomas are simply the first two semesters of a three- or four-semester Master's program. (In the past, the Graduate Diploma of Education was called the Diploma of Education.)
Some universities have issued Postgraduate Diplomas, which are always in the same discipline as the undergraduate degree, and generally no different from a Bachelor with Honours degree, which requires one year after a regular Bachelor degree.
ඉන්දියාව
ඉන්දියාව බොහෝවිට උපාධි ප්රධානයේදී මහා බ්රිතාන්ය සම්ප්රධාය අනුගමනය කරයි.
Arts - Referring to the performing arts and literature the corresponding degree are Bachelor of Arts(BA) and its masters is called Master of Arts(MA).Management degrees are also classified under Arts but is now a days considered a major new stream, Bachelor of Business Administration BBA and Masters Of Business Administration MBA.
Science - Referring to the basic sciences and natural science(Biology, Physics, Chemistry etc) the corresponding degree are Bachelor of Science(BSc) and its masters is called Master of Science(MSc).
Engineering - The engineering degrees in India follow two common patterns. Bachelor of Engineering(BE) and Bachelor of Technology(B.Tech) both representing a bachelors degree in engineering.The main difference being BE is knowledge oriented(Theoretical Work) and B.Tech is skill oriented(Practical Work). Similarly Master of Engineering(ME) and Master of Technology(M.Tech).
යුරෝපය
In Europe, degrees are being harmonized through the , which is based on the three-level hierarchy of degrees: (Licence in France), and . This system is gradually replacing the two-stage system now in use in some countries.
This system is also currently in use in Australia, Belgium, Canada, New Zealand, Portugal, Sweden, Norway, The Netherlands, United Kingdom, Serbia and Croatia.
මෙම ඡේදය පුළුල් කිරීම අවශ්යයි. කරුණු එකතු කර ඔබට ද සහාය විය හැකිය. (2008 මැයි) |
ඔස්ට්රියාව
In Austria, there are currently two parallel systems of academic degrees:
- the traditional two-cycle system of / followed by the Doctorate, and
- the three-cycle system of , and Doctorate as defined by the .
With a few exceptions, the two-cycle degree system will be phased out by 2010. Some of the established degree naming has, however, been preserved, allowing universities to award the "Diplom-Ingenieur" (and for a while also the "Magister") to graduates of the new-style Master's programmes.
ඩෙන්මාර්කය
මෙම ඡේදය පුළුල් කිරීම අවශ්යයි. කරුණු එකතු කර ඔබට ද සහාය විය හැකිය. (2008 මැයි) |
ප්රංශය
In , the academic degree system was quite complicated: the first degree was the (completed in fact after high school), then the two-year diplôme d'études universitaires générales (DEUG General Academic Studies Degree) or premier cycle (undergraduate education), then the one-year , the one-year maîtrise (), the two forming the second cycle (graduate education), the 1-2 years , Special Studies Degree and the three-year doctorate, the two forming the troisième cycle (postgraduate education). With the , the system is now much simpler: baccalauréat (A-level degree), licence (= Bachelor), master (a new two-year degree merging maîtrise and ), and doctorate. This system is called "LMD" system in France, which means licence-master-doctorat.
ජර්මනිය
Traditionally in Germany, students graduated after four to six years either with a (abbreviated M.A.) degree in Social Sciences, , Linguistics and the or with a degree in , Economics, and Engineering. Those degrees were the first and at the same time highest non-/Doctorate-title in many disciplines before its gradual replacement by other, Anglo-Saxon-inspired degrees. From the level of academic study a Magister or Diplom has to be considered equivalent to a master's degree and marks the end of four to six years of studying with the writing of a final thesis similar to a master's thesis.
A special kind of examination is the . It is not an academic degree but a government licensing examination that future doctors, teachers, lawyers (solicitors), judges, public prosecutors, patent attorneys, and pharmacists have to pass in order to be eligible to work in their profession. Students usually study at university for 4-6 years before they take the first Staatsexamen. Afterwards teachers and jurists go on to work in their future jobs for two years, before they are able to take the second Staatsexamen, which tests their practical abilities in their jobs. The first Staatsexamen is at a level which is equivalent to a M.Sc. or M.A.
Since 1999, the traditional degrees are gradually being replaced by 's (Bakkalaureus) and 's (Master) degrees (see ). The main reasons for this change are to make degrees internationally comparable, and to introduce degrees to the German system which take less time to complete (German students typically take five years or more to earn a Magister or Diplom). Some universities are still resistant to this change, considering it a displacement of a venerable tradition for the pure sake of globalization. Universities must fulfill the new standard by the end of 2007. In the future, the or degree will no longer be awarded.
Doctorates are issued under a variety of names, depending on the faculty: e.g., Doktor der Naturwissenschaften (Doctor of Natural Science); Doktor der Rechtswissenschaften (Doctor of Law); Doktor der medizinischen Wissenschaft (Doctor of Medicine); Doktor der Philosophie (Doctor of Philosophy), to name just a few. Multiple doctorates and honorary doctorates are often listed and even used in forms of address in German-speaking countries. A Diplom (from a Universität), Magister, Master's or Staatsexamen student can proceed to a doctorate. The doctoral promotion (e.g. to Dr.rer. nat., Dr.phil. and others) is equivalent to a Ph.D. degree and is therefore the highest academic degree to earn. The doctorate's degree Dr.med. for has to be considered as different: Medical students predominantly write their doctoral theses straight after they have completed studies like other students in other disciplines have to write a Diplom, Magister or Master's thesis.
Sometimes incorrectly regarded as a degree, the is an academic qualification in Germany and Austria, that allows further teaching and research endorsement after a doctorate. It is earned by writing a second thesis (the Habilitationsschrift) or presenting a portfolio of first-author publications in an advanced topic. The exact requirements for satisfying a Habilitation depend on individual universities. The "habil.", as it is abbreviated to represent that a habilitation has been awarded after the doctorate, was traditionally the conventional qualification for serving at least as a Privatdozent (e.g. "PD Dr. habil.") (Lecturer) in an academic professorship (now called W2 and W3). Some German universities no longer require the Habilitation, although preference may still be given to applicants who have this credential, for academic posts in the more traditional fields.
අයර්ලන්තය
In Ireland a is below the standard of the honours , whilst the is taken after the bachelor degree. The new National Framework of Qualifications, adopted in 2003, replaced the National Dipoma with the Ordinary Bachelors degree. The framework also clarifies that although the Higher Diploma is taken after the bachelor degree the learning outcomes are at the same level as for the Honours Bachelors Degree.
More technically, a diploma is a document attesting that its bearer has satisfied certain study requirements, as opposed to a degree being a status level in the academic community. For this reason, diplomas are 'awarded to' the recipient while degrees are 'conferred upon' the graduand who then becomes a graduate, or the graduand is "admitted to" a degree. Similarly a person 'has' a diploma, but a graduate 'is in' a status. It is also for this reason that study for diplomas can be at undergraduate or advanced level.
ඉතාලිය
In Italy access to university is possible after gaining the high school degree, called di maturità which is obtained at 19 years, after 5 years of study in a particular high school, focused on a certain subject (e.g. liceo classico focus on classical subjects and includes ancient Greek and Latin, liceo scientifico focus on scientific subjects but includes Latin and literature, liceo linguistico for languages, istituto tecnico for technics).
After the diploma one can enter university choosing any faculty (e.g. physics, medicine, chemistry, engineering, architecture): there is no requirement to complete a specific high school in order to access a particular faculty but most of the university program test to select students. Almost all faculties nowadays offers two academic degrees. A first degree (called ) is obtained after 3 years of study and a short thesis on one subject. The second degree (called laurea Specialistica/Magistrale - LS/LM) can be obtained proceeding with usually two additional years of study and specializing in a particular branch of the chosen subject (e.g. particle physics, nuclear engineering, etc.). The laurea magistrale is obtained after the discussion of a thesis (which usually involves some academic research or an internship in a private company).
Only few students continue their university career (after passing a public selection) to 3 further years of Dottorato di ricerca (equivalent to a Ph. D) mainly devoted to research (with some compulsory courses), the degree is also obtained after the discussion of a thesis on the results of the research done.
Alternatively, after obtaining the laurea triennale and the laurea magistrale one can attend a so-called Master, (first-level Master after the laurea triennale; second-level Master after the laurea magistrale) offered by universities and private organisations with a variety of subjects, lengths and prices (one year of Master in Italy can cost more than the fees paid for the entire preceding university education), usually including a final internship in a company.
නෙදර්ලන්තය
In , the structure of academic studies was altered significantly in 1982. In this year the "twee fase structuur" (Two Phase Structure) was introduced by the Dutch Minister of Education, Minister Wim Deetman. With this two phase structure an attempt was made to standardise all the different studies and structure them to an identical timetable. Additional effect was that students would be persuaded stringently to produce results within a preset timeframe, or otherwise discontinue their studies. The two phase structure is still in effect today and is in line with the .
In order for a Dutch student to get access to a university education, he/ she has to complete the appropriate pre-university secondary education "Voorbereidend Wetenschappelijk Onderwijs" ( - 6 years). There are other routes possible, but only if the end level of the applicant is comparable to the VWO levels access to university education is granted. For some studies specific end levels or disciplines are required, e.g. graduating without physics, biology, and chemistry will make it impossible to follow an academic medicine study.
For some studies in the Netherlands a governmental determined is in place. This is a limitation of the number of applicants to a specific study, thus trying to control the eventual number of graduates. The most renowned studies for their numerus clausus are the medicine and dentistry. Every year a combination of good pre-university secondary education grades, luck, and some additional conditions determine who can start such a numerus clausus study and who can not. A study location and/ or university to graduate from are appointed and are not subject to free choice. In practice, it is only possible on very exclusive grounds (e.g. family history connected to a certain university) and seldom granted. For example, all the members of the studied at due to the historic ties between the Dutch Royal family and this university.
Almost all are government supported universities, with only very few privately owned universities in existence (i.e. one in , and all others in theology). is the oldest, founded in 1575. Before, the Netherlands existed out of loose provinces, i.e. "The Low Countries", which were occupied and ruled by other powers like Spain. The occupying monarchs did not encourage education at, or allowed the foundation of a university locally, and preferred "moulding" educated people at their own institutions. Therefore, marking the victory on the Spanish, "" (William of Orange, William the Silent) underlined the founding of the by granting Leiden rights to found .
As mentioned before all university studies in the Netherlands have in principle the same length (four years) and exist out of two phases:
- The "propedeutische fase" (1-2 years): Should the student not be able to finish this phase in the given time frame of 2 years, than he or she has to abandon the study and will not be allowed to continue this or another study. After finishing this phase the student follows another two years' study after which the student has a level equivalent to the Anglo-Saxon BSc (), BA () or LLB ().
- The "doctorale fase" (3-4 years): Completing the first phase successfully gives the student access to the second phase. Here the student is expected to conclude the phase within the given time frame of 3 to 4 years. Again, failure to finish within the time given will lead to discontinuation. This phase is concluded with the "doctoraal examen" (doctoral exam). This is not similar to any type of doctoral exam that would grant the student with any type of PhD title. Successful completion however does grant the student the Dutch degree of "doctorandus", abbreviated as "drs". This Dutch title is more and more replaced by the Anglo Saxon titles MSc (), MA (), and LLM (), depending on the area of study. For medical students the "doctorandus" degree is not equivalent to the MD () degree in the Anglo Saxon culture, and does not give the medical student to opportunity to treat patients. For this a minimum of two years additional study (specialisation) is required. The correct notation for a Dutch physician who did complete his or her medical studies, but did not pursue a PhD study is "drs" (e.g. drs. Jansen) and not "dr". In medicine like with many other disciplines, nothing is noted additionally to clarify the specific discipline, although there are some exceptions. Thus a doctorandus in law is allowed to carry the title "meester" (master, abbreviated as mr. Jansen) and some studies like for example physics grant the title "ingenieur" (engineer, noted as ir. Jansen).
Not uncommon, the Dutch "drs" abbreviation can cause much confusion in other countries, since it is perceived as a person who has a PhD in multiple disciplines.
Nowadays many Dutch universities offer specific MSc studies, thus integrating into and merging with the international scientific community. In addition, on many Dutch universities lessons ("hoor colleges") or complete "" are conducted in English in stead of Dutch.
After successfully obtaining a "drs." or MSc degree, the student has the opportunity to follow a PhD study to eventually obtain a doctorate. These too are structured ideally according to a pre-set time schedule of 4 to 6 years. During these 4-6 years the PhD student has to be mentored by a , or more common, multiple professors. The PhD study has to be concluded with at least a scientific thesis that has to be defended to "a gathering of his/ her peers", in practice the Board of the with guest professors from other faculties and/ or universities added. More and more common practice nowadays (and in some disciplines even mandatory) is that during the PhD study the student writes and submits scientific publications to peer-reviewed journals, that eventually need to be accepted for publication. Although the number of publications is often debated and varies considerably, a minimum of four (one per year of PhD study) is quite accepted in the field of the exact sciences, physics, chemistry, technology, and medicine.
After successful conclusion of a PhD study, the student is allowed the title of "doctor", abbreviated as "dr". This is similar for all Dutch PhD graduates. The discipline in which the PhD is obtained is not specifically noted. Hence for example a PhD in law, medicine, or mathematics all put the same abbreviation in front of their name, (e.g. dr. Jansen). As with the "doctorandus" degree, nothing is noted behind the name of the PhD to specify the discipline. Stacking of titles as seen in other countries like for example Germany (Prof. Dr. Dr. Dr. Musterfrau) is highly uncommon in the Netherlands and not well received.
PhD graduates or "doctor"s can proceed to teach at universities as "Universitair Docent" (UD – ). With time, experience, and/ or achievement, this can evolve to a position as "Universitair Hoofd Docent" (UHD – ). Officially an UHD still works under the supervision of a "hoog leraar", the head of the department and commonly a . The position of "hoog leraar" is the highest possible scientific position at a university, and equal to the US "full" professor.
In the Netherlands, the title of (noted as prof. Jansen or professor Jansen) is connected to ones function. In practice, professors are head of a scientific department of a university faculty. However, this is not a given; it is also possible that a department is headed by a "plain" PhD, based on knowledge, achievement, and expertise. Officially it is not possible to use the title if not connected to a university. Should a decide to leave the university, thus he or she also loses the privilege to use the title of . In practice however, different customs are observed. Rule of thumb however is that retired professors often still note the title in front of their name, where as people still active switch to a non-university job must switch from the professor title to the PhD or "dr" abbreviation.
Contrary to some other European countries, in the Netherlands academic titles are rarely used outside of academia and are not listed on official documentation (e.g. passport and drivers licence) as for example in Germany. Dutch academic titles however are legally protected and can only be used by graduates from Dutch institutions of higher education. Illegal use is considered an offence and subject to legal prosecution. Holders of foreign degrees therefore need special permission before being able to use a (Dutch) title. Article 7.23 of the Dutch Higher Education Act provides the Informatie Beheer Groep with the possibility to grant such a permission.
නෝර්වේ
Prior to 2003, there were around 50 different degrees and corresponding education programs within the Norwegian higher education system. In 2003, a reform was instituted to replace this older system with an "international system."
For example, many degrees had titles that included the Latin term candidatus/candidata. The second part of the title usually consisted of a Latin word corresponding to the profession or training. These degrees were all retired in 2003.
The reform of higher education in Norway, Kvalitetsreformen ("The Quality Reform"), was passed in the Norwegian Parliament, the , in 2001 and carried out during the 2003/2004 academic year. It introduced standard periods of study and the titles master and bachelor ().
The system differentiates between a free master's degree and a master's degree in technology. The latter corresponds to the former sivilingeniør degree (not to be confused with a degree in civil engineering, which is but one of many degrees linked to the title sivilingeniør, which is still in use for new graduates who can chose to also use the old title). All pre-2001 doctoral degree titles were replaced with the title "Philosophical Doctor degree", written philosophiæ doctor (instead of the traditional doctor philosophiæ). The title is a substantially higher degree than the PhD, and is reserved for those who qualify for such a degree without participating in an organized doctoral degree program.
පෝලන්තය
In the system is similar to the German one. For instance, confers the following university degrees and titles:
- licencjat title (the equivalent of a Bachelor's degree, granted after at least 3 years of study),
- inżynier title (the equivalent of engineer's degree, granted after at least 3,5 years of study
- magister title (the equivalent of a Master's degree, granted after 5 years of study, or 2 years of additional study by holders of a previous degree),
- doktor degree (Doctor's degree, Ph.D.),
- doktor habilitowany degree (Polish degree, requires approval by an external ministerial body),
The profesor (Professor's) title is officially conferred by the .
රුසියාව යුක්රේනය ආදී රටවල්
In රුසියාව, and some other they strongly distinguish educational kinds of academic degrees and "real" academic degrees connected with scientific researches.
The educational degrees are awarded after finishing college education. There are several levels of education one must choose between 2nd and 3rd year usually on the 3rd year of study.
- - usually takes 4 years of college. (minimum level to be recognized as having Higher Education)
- is awarded after 5 years of college. (4 + 1)
- Magister degree is awarded after 6 years of college. (4 + 2)
Usually Specialist or Magister degrees incorporates Bachelor degree in them, but only high level degree is stated in final diploma. Specialist and Bachelor degree require taking final state exams and written work on practical application of studied skills or research thesis (usually 50-70 pages) and is roughly equivalent to .
First level academic degree is called "" (say, candidate of physical-mathematical sciences, or candidate of engineering sciences, candidate of historical sciences, etc). This degree requires extensive research efforts, taking some classes, publications in peer-reviewed academic journals (usually 5 publications suffice), and writing in-depth thesis (80-200 pages). Special scientific council of notable specialists in the field then reviews the thesis, the written opinions of several outside referees, and upon approval recommends the thesis for defense. Upon open defense in front of the same council the members of the council vote (it takes dominant majority - 2/3 - to pass) and then a chair writes a statement on recommending to award the degree "candidate of ... sciences" to the defendant. All paperwork including thesis is then sent to so called which upon review makes final approval and then issues the diploma of "candidate of science". The "candidate of sciences" degree is roughly equivalent to US Ph.D. degree, although it requires longer research efforts, more publications (actually in US publications are not required for Ph.D. degree), wider exposure, and larger peer pool to pass.
Finally, there is a "" (Doktor nauk) degree in Russia and some former USSR academic environment. This degree is sought after by established scientists who made discovery-level contributions into certain field (formally - who established new direction or new field in science). It requires discovery of new phenomenon, or development of new theory, or essential development of new direction, etc. This usually takes a decade or two of hard work after receiving "candidate of sciences" degree, an extensive list of publications in peer-reviewed academic journals (usually ~50-300+ papers), publishing a few monographs, extensive participation in various panels and peers (journals, conferences, grant/award panels, etc), and establishing a school of "candidates of sciences" under own supervision (so at least a few of your students have received "candidacy" degrees working with you on your discovery or in your new field/direction). It requires writing a deep and advanced thesis (usually 300-800 pages) and defending it in front of special council of prominent scientists in the field (or in adjacent fields if the field/discovery is completely new) in a similar to "candidate of sciences" defense manner. Upon voting all paperwork is again sent to the Highest Attestation Commission which upon approval awards the diploma of "doctor of ... sciences".
There is no equivalent of this "doctor of sciences" degree in US academic system. It is roughly equivalent to in Germany, France, Austria, and some other European countries.
ස්පාඥ්ඥය
Before the , the are Diplom (Bachelor Degree for 3 year) and Licenciado (for 5 year) but after it has changed to Grado for all universitaries (Except for Medical and Architecture that will be directly master "still under discussion" if they can certify min 5 years professional experience ) and Master to the ones who make later the postgrade master courses (60 to 120 ECTS credits in one or two years) and Doctor if you continue studies.
Very Important: must look to make official Master with ETCS credit because some university are making their own Masters without this ETCS credits out of the but this lastones are only like the Diploma http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diploma (Sept 08). Also see differences between diplom and diploma
ස්වීඩනය
මෙම ඡේදය පුළුල් කිරීම අවශ්යයි. කරුණු එකතු කර ඔබට ද සහාය විය හැකිය. (2008 මැයි) |
ස්විස්ටරලන්තය
Before the , because there are three official languages in Switzerland (German, French and Italian), the Universities' degrees were different, depending on the language. In French-speaking universities, the first academic degree was the : 4 to 5 years of study, equivalent to the in the UK or the USA. The postgraduate degree was the diplôme d'études approfondies : 1-2 years of study, equivalent to the Master of Advanced Studies degree. In the Swiss-German Universities, the first degree was called , a 4-year degree, and the second was the . In the Italian-speaking University, the first degree was called , a 4-year degree; the second was the , which took 1-2 years. The Doctoral's degree is the last stage at all the universities; it requires 3-5 years, depending on the field.
යුක්රේනය
This subsection is for an image on the right-hand side. For information see subsection "Russian, Ukraine and some other former USSR republics".
එක්සත් රාජධානිය
එංගලන්තය හා වේල්සය
මහා බ්රිතාන්ය තුල ප්රථම උපාධිය වසර තුනක අධ්යන කාලයකට අයත්වේ.කලා උපාධිය ( BA ) ඉංජිනේරු උපාධිය(BEng) සහ විද්යා උපාධිය(BSc) මේ ගණයට අයත්ය.
මෙම උපාධිය පංති සාමාර්ථ හතරකට බෙදේ.ඒ මෙසේය:
- ප්රථම පංති සාමාර්ථය (1st)
- දෙවන පංති සාමාර්ථය කොටස් දෙකකට බෙදේ:
- දෙවන පංති ඉහළ සාමාර්ථය (2:1)
- දෙවන සංති පහළ සාමාර්ථය (2:2)
- තුන්වන පංති සාමාර්ථය (3rd)
යම් ශීෂ්යයෙකු අදාල කුසලතා දැක්වීමට අපොහාසත් වුවහොත් එහෙත් නැවත නැවත පෙනී සිටිමින් අදාල ලකුණු මට්ටමට ලගාවූවිට ඔහුට හෝ ඇයට ගෞරව උපාධියක් වෙනුවට සාමාන්ය සාමාර්තයක් පමණක් හිමිවේ.
The Graduateship (post-nominal GCGI) awarded by the City & Guilds of London Institute is mapped to a British Honours degree
Some students study an integrated Master's, which is still a first degree. This takes four years of study and is usually designated by the subject, such as for engineering, MPhys for physics, MMath for mathematics, and so on. Grades are as above. The 4-year MEng degree in particular has now become the standard first degree in engineering in the top UK universities, replacing the older 3-year BEng.
Unlike the case in the United States, due to earlier specialisation in education, may take only one year of full-time study, and the usual amount of time spent working for a Ph.D. is three years full-time. Therefore, whilst the usual amount of time spent studying from Bachelors level through to doctorate in the United States is nine years, it is in most cases only seven in the United Kingdom, and may be just six, since a Master's degree is not always a precondition for embarking on a PhD.
Recently, there has been a significant rise in the number of courses offering "Postgraduate Diplomas", often in very specific, vocationally-related subjects. Many institutions (eg The Open University) offer these courses over one year, with an additional year or two required for the award of a Master's. The popularity of these courses is in part due to legislative requirements to demonstrate managerial competence in public-sector related functions.
A can be awarded for having completed two years of study in what is usually a vocational discipline. The Foundation degree is comparable to an associate's degree in the United States, and can be awarded by a University, or College of Higher Education.
ස්කොට්ලන්තය
The standard in ස්කොට්ලන්තය is either a which only awarded by the (whereas a is awarded by all other modern institutions), for arts and humanities subjects, or a , for natural and social science subjects. These can either be studied at general or honours levels. A general degree (MA or BSc) takes three years to complete; an honours degree (MA Hons or BSc Hons) takes four years to complete. The general degree is not in a specific subject, but involves study across a range of subjects within the relevant faculty. The honours degree involves two years of study at a sub-honours level in which a range of subjects within the relevant faculty are studied, and then two years of study at honours level which is specialised in a single field (for example classics, history, chemistry, biology, etc).
This also reflects the broader scope of the final years of , where traditionally five are studied, compared to (typically) three English or Welsh . The Higher is a one year qualification, as opposed to the two years of A-Levels, which accounts for Scottish honours degrees being a year longer than those in England. add an optional final year of secondary education, bringing students up to the level of their A-Level counterparts - students with strong A-Levels or Advanced Highers may be offered entry directly into the second year at Scottish universities.
Honours for MA or BSc are classified into three classes:
- First class honours
- Second class honours, divided into
- Division one (2:1)
- Division two (2:2)
- Third class honours
Students who complete all the requirements for an honours degree, but do not receive sufficient merit to be awarded third-class honours may be awarded a Special Degree
Postgraduate may be offered in some subjects; however, unlike England and Wales, these are not designated Master of Arts, as this is an undergraduate degree. Postgraduate degrees in arts and humanities subjects are usually designated (MLitt); in natural and social sciences, as (MSc). Non-doctoral postgraduate research degrees are usually designated (MPhil) or (MRes). First doctoral research degrees in arts, science and humanities subjects are usually designated Doctor of Philosophy (PhD).
යොමුව
- Makdisi, George (April-June 1989), "Scholasticism and Humanism in Classical Islam and the Christian West", Journal of the American Oriental Society 109 (2): 175-182 [175-77]
- Note: In the U.S. and Europe (except U.K.), the M.D. Program of Study is a full-time four to five year course that requires a prior bachelor's degree. There are six or seven year "straight M.D. programs" after high school, similar to "straight Ph.D. programs", in some Universities
- Note: In the U.S., some pharmacy schools offer the PharmD as a six-year program which does not require a prior bachelor's degree and is more akin to a professional Master's degree, while currently there is debate among the pharmacy community and pressure from the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy to make schools offer it as a 4-year post-bachelors program.
- Note: In the UK and the Commonweatlh (except Canada), the M.D. degree is a graduate research degree distinct from the professional medical MBBS or degree
- Association of American Universities Data Exchange. . Accessed May 26, 2008; National Science Foundation (2006). "Time to Degree of U.S. Research Doctorate Recipients 2016-03-08 at the Wayback Machine," ‘’InfoBrief, Science Resource Statistics’’ NSF 06-312, 2006, p. 7. (under "Data notes" mentions that the J.D. is a professional doctorate); San Diego County Bar Association (1969). ‘’Ethics Opinion 1969-5’’ 2003-04-11 at the Wayback Machine. Accessed May 26, 2008. (under "other references" discusses differences between academic and professional doctorate, and statement that the J.D. is a professional doctorate); University of Utah (2006). University of Utah – The Graduate School – Graduate Handbook 2008-06-26 at the Wayback Machine. Accessed May 28, 2008. (the J.D. degree is listed under doctorate degrees); German Federal Ministry of Education. . Accessed May 26, 2008. (report by the German Federal Ministry of Education analysing the Chronicle of Higher Education from the U.S. and stating that the J.D. is a professional doctorate); Encyclopedia Britannica. (2002). ‘’Encyclopedia Britannica’’, 3:962:1a. (the J.D. is listed among other doctorate degrees).
- Wadsack, Ingrid; Kasparovsky, Heinz (2004) (PDF), Higher Education in Austria (2nd ed.), : Austrian Federal Ministry of Education, Science and Culture, , http://web.archive.org/web/20070811023740/http://www.fulbright.at/dokumente/us_citizens/general/hssystem_04e.pdf , archived from the original on 2007-08-11
- Informatie Beheer Groep (IB-Groep) under commission of the Dutch Ministery of Education, Culture, and Science (http://www.ibgroep.nl/International_visitors/Welcome.asp 2007-09-29 at the Wayback Machine).
- More information on legislation on http://www.ibgroep.nl/International_visitors/Diploma_assessment/diploma_assessment.asp 2011-07-19 at the Wayback Machine.
- Application forms via http://www.ib-groep.nl/Images/5263E_KS_01_tcm7-6860.pdf[].
- Rectors' Conference of the Swiss Universities, http://www.crus.ch/information-programmes/bologne-ects/equivalence.html?L=1, ප්රතිෂ්ඨාපනය 2009-03-18
මේවාත් බලන්
බාහිර සබැදුම්
(U.S.) | , , ABA, ABS, AOS, AS, (Australia), |
(U.K.) | , , , , , , |
or , , , , , , , or , , , , , , , , , or , , , , ,, , , , , , , , or , , , , , or or , or , , , , , , or or or or , , , , | |
, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , or , , , , , , (Oxon), (Oxon), | |
: | , , , , , , |
, , | |
AE, , , , CE, ChE, , , , , , ME, , , , , | |
, , , , , MD (US), , , , , , , , , , , , | |
Doctoral degrees | PhD, , , , , , , , , , , , , , MD (out of US and Canada), , , , , , , DPhil, , , , , , , , |
විකිපීඩියාව, විකි, සිංහල, පොත, පොත්, පුස්තකාලය, ලිපිය, කියවන්න, බාගන්න, නොමිලේ, නොමිලේ බාගන්න, mp3, වීඩියෝ, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, පින්තූරය, සංගීතය, ගීතය, චිත්රපටය, පොත, ක්රීඩාව, ක්රීඩා., ජංගම දුරකථන, android, ios, apple, ජංගම දුරකථන, samsung, iphone, xiomi, xiaomi, redmi, honor, oppo, nokia, sonya, mi, පීසී, වෙබ්, පරිගණකය
ඉත හ සයඅන ක ත ර ක ය ම න ම ග ර ව ත ත ය සදහ ද න ස අධ ය පනය හ ප හ ණ ව ලද ප ද ගලයන ත ර ග න මට රජය ම න ම ප ද ගල ක අධ ය පන ආයතන වගබල ගන ඒ ස ද ස කම අතර උප ධ යක හ ම ග ර වර න සදහ ව ශ ෂ ස ථ නයක හ ම ව උප ධ ප ර න ම මද ස ද වන න උසස අධ ය පන ආයතන මග න ශ ෂ යය ක ව ද හලකට ඇත ලත කර පස ප ළ ව ල න න යම ත ශ ණ න ටඅද ල ව භ ග සමත ව ම න පස ඉහළම අධ ය පන ස ද ස කම ල බ ස ස න උප ධ සදහ ත ර ගන ල බ ම ස උප ධ ප ර න ම ම අත තය ස ට ස ද ව ය අත තය ප වත උසස අධ ය පන ආයතන ල ස තක ෂ ල න ලන ද ව ක රමශ ල ජගද දල ව න ආයතන ද ක ව ය හ ක ම ම උසස අධ ය පන ආයතන ත ල ඉත ස ර ථක ල ස ඉග න ම කටය ත ස ද කරඇත බව ඉත හ සඥයන ප න ව ද ය අත තය රජ ක ම රවර න තක ෂ ල ව නම ව ද යස ථ නයක න ශ ල ප හ ද ර බවත ඔව න ට දක ෂත මත ව ව ධ නම බ න ම ප ර න ම බවත පන ස ය පනස ජ තක ප ත ව න ම ල ශ රවල ද ක ව 14 හ 15 වන ස යවසයන හ ද න ලන න ව ක රමශ ල ජගද දල ව න ව ශ ව ව ද ය ල ඉන ද ය ව ත ල ප වත ඉත ප රකට ව ශ ව ව ද ය ලව ය ම ය න ත න ලන ද ව ශ ව ව ද ය ලය ප රම ඛ ව ය න ලන ද ව ශ ව ව ද ය ලය සත ව ඉත ව ශ ල හ උස න ව ඩ ග ඩන ග ල ප හ ට ඇත ම ම ව ශ ව ව ද ය ල ත ල ව ඩ වශය න මහ ය න බ ද දහම හ ව නත බ හ ව ෂයන අධ යනය කර ඇත ම ම ව ශ ව ව ද ය ල පස ව ඉන ද ය වට ප ම න ම ස ළ ම ආක රමණ කයන ව ස න ග න තබ ව න ශ කරනලද ම ම ව ශ ව ව ද ය ල ත ල ප වත වට න ප ස ථක ම ස හයක ප ර වට ග න ග න ද ව න බව ප වස The origins of the doctorate in particular dates back to the attadris wa l ifttd license to teach and issue legal opinions in the medieval which was equivalent to the qualification and was developed during the 9th century after the formation of the legal schools To obtain a doctorate a student had to study in a usually four years for the basic course and at least ten years for a course The doctorate was obtained after an oral to determine the originality of the candidate s and to test the student s ability to defend them against all objections in set up for the purpose which were scholarly exercises practiced throughout the student s career as a graduate After students completed their post graduate education they were awarded doctorates giving them the status of meaning meaning professor of and mudarris meaning teacher which were later translated into Latin as and respectively In the candidates who had completed three or four years of study in the prescribed texts of the grammar rhetoric and logic and the quadrivium mathematics geometry astronomy and music together known as the and who had successfully passed examinations held by their masters would be admitted to the degree of from the Latin baccalaureus Error Lang text has italic markup help a term previously usually used of a squire i e apprentice to a knight Further study and in particular successful participation in and then moderating of would earn one the degree from the Latin teacher entitling one to teach these subjects Masters of Arts were eligible to enter study under the higher faculties of Law Medicine or Theology and earn first a bachelor s and then master s or doctor s degrees in these subjects Thus a degree was only a step on the way to becoming a fully qualified master hence the English word graduate which is based on the Latin gradus Error Lang text has italic markup help step Today the terms master doctor from the Latin meaning literally teacher and professor signify different levels of academic achievement but in the Medieval university they were equivalent terms the use of them in the degree name being a matter of custom at a university Most universities conferred the Master of Arts but for instance the highest degree was variously termed Master of Theology Divinity or Doctor of Theology Divinity depending on the place The earliest doctoral degrees theology Divinitatis Doctor D D philosophy Doctor of philosophy D Phil Ph D and medicine Medicinae Doctor M D D M reflected the historical separation of all University study into these three fields Over time the D D has gradually become less common and studies outside theology and medicine have become more common such studies were then called philosophy but are now classified as sciences and humanities however this usage survives in the degree of Doctor of Philosophy The in Italy regarded as the oldest university in Europe was the first institution to confer the degree of Doctor in Civil Law in the late 12th century it also conferred similar degrees in other subjects including ව ද ය ව ද ය ව The used the term master for its graduates a practice adopted by the English universities of Oxford and Cambridge as well as the ancient Scottish universities of and Edinburgh The naming of degrees eventually became linked with the subjects studied Scholars in the faculties of or became known as masters but those in medicine and law were known as doctor As study in the arts or in grammar was a necessary prerequisite to study in subjects such as theology medicine and law the degree of doctor assumed a higher status than the This led to the modern hierarchy in which the Doctor of Philosophy Ph D which in its present form as a degree based on research and dissertation is a development from 18th and 19th Century German universities is a more advanced degree than the M A The practice of using the term doctor for all advanced degrees developed within German universities and spread across the academic world The French terminology is tied closely to the original meanings of the terms The cf bachelor is conferred upon French students who have successfully completed their and admits the student to university When students graduate from university they are awarded licence much as the teaching guilds would have done and they are qualified to teach in secondary schools or proceed to higher level studies In the past degrees have also been directly issued by authority of the monarch or by a bishop rather than any educational institution This practice has mostly died out In Britain are still awarded by the Archbishop of Canterbury In most countries gaining an academic degree entitles the holder to assume distinctive particular to the awarding institution Academic dress is like a uniform or insignia identifying the status of the individual wearing them න දර ශනSome examples of specific degrees follow each general term For more information see the article about the general term AA Associate in Arts AS Associate in Science AAS Associate in Applied Science AGS Associate in General Studies or or or or MCM MPS or s degree Professional Doctoral degrees or M Div M D UK Research Doctoral degrees Ph D Germany or or or or M D Abbreviations for degrees can place the level either before or after the faculty or discipline depending on the institution For example DSc and ScD both stand for the higher doctorate in science Various other abbreviations also vary between institutions for instance BS and BSc both stand for Bachelor of Science There are various conventions for indicating degrees and diplomas after one s name In some cultures it is usual to give only the highest degree In others it is usual to give the full sequence in some cases giving abbreviations also for the discipline the institution and where it applies the level of honours In another variation a rule of subsumption often shortens the list and may obscure the chronology evident from a full listing Thus MSc BA means that the degrees conferred were in chronological order BSc BA MSc The subsumption rule reflects the principle that a person of a given high status does not separately belong to the lower status For member institutions of the there is a standard list of abbreviations but in practice many variations are used Most notable is the use of the Latin abbreviations Oxon and Cantab for the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge in spite of these having been superseded by little used English Oxf and Camb Other Latin abbreviations include St And for the Exon for the Dunelm for Ebor for the and Cantuar for the formerly the University of Kent at Canterbury Confusion results from the widespread use of SA for the University of South Australia instead of S Aust because SA was officially assigned to the University of South Africa For universities of different commonwealth countries sharing the same name such as York University in Canada and the University of York in the UK a convention has been adopted where a country abbreviation is included with the letters and university name In this example York Can and York UK is commonly used to denote degrees conferred by their respective universities The doubling of letters in LL B LL M LL D is because these degrees are in laws not law The doubled letter indicates the Latin plural genitive case legum as opposed to the singular genitive case legis Abbreviations for the degrees in surgery Ch B and Ch M are from Latin chiruguriae and often indicate a university system patterned after Scottish models The combination of M B with Ch B arose from a need to graduate the students at the time of year allocated to graduation rituals but the legal inability to confer the M B before they had been properly approved by professional regulatory bodies Thus the Ch B was conferred first and the M B was conferred later after registration and without ceremony In recent times the two have come to be conferred together and are widely mis understood to constitute a single degree Some degrees are awarded jure dignitatis That is a person who has demonstrated the appropriate qualities to be given a particular office may be awarded the degree by virtue of the office held It is another kind of earned but not strictly academic degree ප රද ශයන අන ව උප ධ ක ර ය ප ළ ව ලඋත ර හ දක ණ ඇමර ක ව බ රස ලය Undergraduate students in Brazilian universities normally graduate either with a Bacharel degree equivalent to an American or or with a professional degree roughly modeled on the old German Bacharel degrees are awarded in most fields of study in the arts humanities social sciences mathematics or natural sciences and normally take four years to complete some degrees as in Law require an extra fifth year to be obtained Professional degrees are awarded in state regulated professions such as architecture engineering psychology pharmacy dental medicine veterinary medicine or human medicine and are named after the profession itself i e one graduates with a degree of Engenheiro engineer Arquiteto architect or Medico physician surgeon for example Professional degrees are generally regarded as being of higher social standing than a Bacharel degree and are considered more academically demanding A typical course of study leading to a first professional degree in Brazil normally takes five years of full time study to complete with the exception of the human medicine course which requires six years In addition to the standard Bacharel and professional degrees Brazilian universities also offer the Licenciatura degree available for students who want to qualify as teachers Licenciatura courses exist mostly in mathematics humanities and natural sciences Although Licenciatura courses also last 4 years they are nonetheless considered to be of lower standing than a Bacharelado course A lower degree of Tecnologo Technologist is also available in technology related fields and can be normally obtained in three years only Admission as an undergraduate student in most top public or private universities in Brazil requires that the applicant pass a competitive entrance examination known as Contrary to what happens in the United States candidates must declare their intended university major when they register for the Vestibular Although it is theoretically possible to switch majors afterwards in a process known within the universities as transferencia interna that is actually quite rare in Brazil Undergraduate curricula tend to be more rigid than in the United States and there is little room to take classes outside one s major Individuals who hold either a Bacharel degree a professional diploma or Licenciatura are eligible for admission into courses leading to advanced s or doctor s degrees Criteria for admission into master s and doctor s programs vary in Brazil Some universities require that candidates take entrance exams others make admission decisions based solely on undergraduate transcripts letters of recommendation and possibly oral interviews In most cases however especially for the doctorate the candidate is required to submit a research plan and one faculty member must agree to serve as his her supervisor before the candidate can be admitted into the program The exception are the post graduate programs that accepts students with very broad and or vague research prospects sometimes the prospect is given in promptu during the interview preferring to let the students define their study program and advisor in the course of the first year of studies Master s degrees normally take two years to obtain and are classified into academic master s degrees or professional master s degrees Requirements for an academic master s degree normally include taking a minimum number of advanced graduate classes typically between five and eight and submitting a research thesis which is examined orally by a panel of at least two examiners three is the preferred number sometimes including one external member who must be from another university or research institute The emphasis of the thesis must be in its clarity and ease of understanding by future students not in its originality Professional master s degrees on the other hand normally involve taking a larger number of classes and in the case of engineering programs in particular often completing a project as an intern in an engineering company and submitting a final project report The most relevant difference to the international scenario is that due to restrictive production goals set by government agencies in most universities a Master degree is not only considered inferior to a Doctor degree but a pre requisite for the admission in a Doctorate program Master s titles in Brazil normally include an explicit reference to the field of study in which they were awarded e g one graduates with a degree of Mestre em Engenharia Master of Engineering Mestre em Economia Master of Economics and so on The generic title Mestre em Ciencias Master of Sciences is used sometimes though especially in the natural sciences physics biology chemistry etc The word profissional is normally added to the title to distinguish it from an academic master s degree e g Mestre Profissional em Engenharia Aeronautica Professional Master in Aeronautical Engineering Doctor s degrees on the other hand normally take four additional years of full time study to complete and are of a higher standing than a master s degree With very few exceptions namely people with outstanding accomplishments in research a Master degree or equivalent is required for admission in a Doctorate Program Requirements for obtaining a doctor s degree include taking additional advanced courses passing an oral qualifying exam and submitting a longer doctoral dissertation which must represent a significant original contribution to knowledge in the field to which the dissertation topic is related That contrasts with master s theses which in addition to being usually shorter than doctoral dissertations are not required to include creation of new knowledge or revision reinterpretation of older views theories The doctoral dissertation is examined in a final oral exam before a panel of at least two members in the state of Sao Paulo the preferred number is five while the other regions prefer three members usually including one or two external examiners from another university or research institute Conventions for naming doctoral degrees follow similar rules to those used for master s degree i e an explicit reference to the field of study is normally included in the title itself e g Doutor em Engenharia Doctor of Engineering Doutor em Direito Doctor of Laws Doutor em Economia Doctor of Economics etc although a generic title like Doutor em Ciencias Doctor of Sciences may be occasionally used Finally a small number of Brazilian universities most notably the public universities in the state of still award the title of Livre Docente free which is of higher standing than a doctorate and is obtained similar to the German by the submission of a second original or cumulative thesis and approval in a Livre Docencia examination that includes giving a public lecture before a panel of full professors ක ළ ම බ ය ව In Colombia the system of degrees is a bit similar to the U S model After completing their high school or bachillerato students called bachilleres can take one of two options The first is called a Profesional which is similar to a Bachelor s Degree requiring from nine to eleven semesters of study according to the program chosen The other option is called a Tecnico this degree only three years of study and prepares the student for technical or mechanical labors similar to the associate s degree given in the U S After this students now called profesionales or tecnicos can opt for higher degrees Formal education after the Bachelor s degree is the Master s degree with the title of Magister and Doctorate s degree known as Doctorado The Master s degree has a normal duration of two years More commonly students prefer to take an specialization s degree Especializacion after their bachelor s degree rather than the more formal Master and Doctorate paths This program is very popular in the country because it requires only one year to complete and because the student only acquires the technical knowledge without the bulk of the theoretical subjects A similar situation in Colombia when compared to the U S system is that the students may go directly to the Doctorado without having to take the Master or Especializacion ච ල In Chile the system in a nutshell is as follows Quite similar to the case described for Colombia students may opt to be Profesionales Professionals or Tecnicos Technicians After completion of high school students may follow professional or technical studies at Universities or Technical schools Only Universities and the Academies of the Armed Forces can give Academic Degrees In general traditional professions require an Academic Degree but there are many professions that not require the degree because they were conceived as strictly professional not academic The degrees are as follows Licenciado it is similar to the Bachelor but to get it is necessary to complete at least eight semesters of study on the subjects which are part of the Mayor This degree is enough to continue developing an academic career however to get a professional title which is not academic but allows you to get a professional practice you have to continue one or two additional years of study For example to be an engineer it is necessary to study four years to get a Licentiate in Engineering Sciences and two additional years to get a Professional Title and become an engineer Sometimes it is possible to take additional subjects and get a Magister degree besides the professional title Magister is the equivalent to the Master degree in English speaking countries Doctorado is the equivalent to the Doctorate or Phd There is no separate classification for Professional Doctorates In particular the engineering profession may be complicated for the foreigner since there is two types of engineers those who got an Academic Degree such as Civil Engineers or Armed Forced Politechnical Engineers and those who are Ingenieros en Ejecucion Professional Engineers which are considered technicians more focused to apply the engineering and completed only four years of study They are not able by law to authorise plans or drawings like engineers with a degree or architects එක සත ර ජධ න ය In the United States since the late 1800s the threefold degree system of bachelor master and doctor has been in place but follows a slightly different pattern of study from the European equivalents In the United States most standard academic programs are based on the four year bachelor s degree most often B A or B S a one or two year master s degree most often M A or M S either of these programs might be as much as three years in length and a further one or two years of coursework and research culminating in comprehensive examinations in one or more fields plus perhaps some teaching experience and then the writing of a dissertation for the doctorate most often Ph D or other types such as Ed D Psy D Th D for a total of ten or more years from starting the bachelor s degree which is usually begun around age 18 to the awarding of the doctorate This timetable is only approximate however as students in accelerated programs can sometimes earn a bachelor s degree in three years or on the other hand a particular dissertation project might take four or more years to complete In addition a graduate may wait an indeterminate time between degrees before candidacy in the next level or even an additional degree at a level already completed Therefore there is no time limit on the accumulation of academic degrees Some schools mostly and but some four year schools as well offer an for two full years of study often in pre professional areas This may stand alone or sometimes be used as credit toward completion of the four year bachelor s degree In the United States there is also another class of degrees called These degree programs are designed for professional practice in various fields rather than academic scholarship Most professional degree programs require a prior bachelor s degree for admission a notable exception being the PharmD program and so represent at least about five total years of study and as many as seven or eight Some fields such as fine art architecture or divinity have chosen to name their first professional degree after the bachelor s a master s degree e g because most of these degrees require at least the completion of a bachelor s degree while the professional degrees in ව ද ය ව ද ය ව the or and law the are doctorates There is currently some debate in the architectural community to rename the degree to a doctorate in the manner that was done for the law degree decades ago It is important to recognize that first professional degrees in these fields are different from research oriented degrees and comparisons to the Ph D are problematic ආස ය ව හ ඔස ය න ව ඔස ට ර ල ය ව In some countries such as Australia a diploma is a specific academic award in addition to that of Bachelor Master s Doctorate Diplomas are usually signified by a rather than an academic hood the latter being used only for those of graduate status A person with a diploma is termed a diplomate Australia has several different kinds of diplomas Diplomas Advanced Diplomas Graduate Diplomas and The system is not without anomalies due largely to the different traditions of individual institutions which the aims to regularise A Diploma is usually equivalent to the first year of a Bachelor s degree although a few have been similar to Bachelor of Arts degrees and permit direct admission to graduate programs An Australian Advanced Diploma is usually considered lower than a Bachelor degree but may qualify its holder for advanced placement in a Bachelor program direct admission to a Graduate Diploma course or albeit rarely direct admission to a Master s program Graduate Diplomas are always higher than a Bachelor degree and usually require one year of full time study They are often an additional course taken after a standard Bachelor degree to introduce a specialization in a particular field or a new discipline For example Australian school teachers often study for a bachelor s degree in Arts or Science then in an additional year complete requirements for a Graduate Diploma of Education which qualifies them as school teachers Some Graduate Diplomas are simply the first two semesters of a three or four semester Master s program In the past the Graduate Diploma of Education was called the Diploma of Education Some universities have issued Postgraduate Diplomas which are always in the same discipline as the undergraduate degree and generally no different from a Bachelor with Honours degree which requires one year after a regular Bachelor degree ඉන ද ය ව ඉන ද ය ව බ හ ව ට උප ධ ප රධ නය ද මහ බ ර ත න ය සම ප රධ ය අන ගමනය කරය Arts Referring to the performing arts and literature the corresponding degree are Bachelor of Arts BA and its masters is called Master of Arts MA Management degrees are also classified under Arts but is now a days considered a major new stream Bachelor of Business Administration BBA and Masters Of Business Administration MBA Science Referring to the basic sciences and natural science Biology Physics Chemistry etc the corresponding degree are Bachelor of Science BSc and its masters is called Master of Science MSc Engineering The engineering degrees in India follow two common patterns Bachelor of Engineering BE and Bachelor of Technology B Tech both representing a bachelors degree in engineering The main difference being BE is knowledge oriented Theoretical Work and B Tech is skill oriented Practical Work Similarly Master of Engineering ME and Master of Technology M Tech ය ර පය ම ල ක ල ප යන සහ In Europe degrees are being harmonized through the which is based on the three level hierarchy of degrees Licence in France and This system is gradually replacing the two stage system now in use in some countries This system is also currently in use in Australia Belgium Canada New Zealand Portugal Sweden Norway The Netherlands United Kingdom Serbia and Croatia ම ම ඡ දය ප ළ ල ක ර ම අවශ යය කර ණ එකත කර ඔබට ද සහ ය ව ය හ ක ය 2008 ම ය ඔස ට ර ය ව In Austria there are currently two parallel systems of academic degrees the traditional two cycle system of followed by the Doctorate and the three cycle system of and Doctorate as defined by the With a few exceptions the two cycle degree system will be phased out by 2010 Some of the established degree naming has however been preserved allowing universities to award the Diplom Ingenieur and for a while also the Magister to graduates of the new style Master s programmes ඩ න ම ර කය ම ම ඡ දය ප ළ ල ක ර ම අවශ යය කර ණ එකත කර ඔබට ද සහ ය ව ය හ ක ය 2008 ම ය ප ර ශය In the academic degree system was quite complicated the first degree was the completed in fact after high school then the two year diplome d etudes universitaires generales DEUG General Academic Studies Degree or premier cycle undergraduate education then the one year the one year maitrise the two forming the second cycle graduate education the 1 2 years Special Studies Degree and the three year doctorate the two forming the troisieme cycle postgraduate education With the the system is now much simpler baccalaureat A level degree licence Bachelor master a new two year degree merging maitrise and and doctorate This system is called LMD system in France which means licence master doctorat ජර මන ය Traditionally in Germany students graduated after four to six years either with a abbreviated M A degree in Social Sciences Linguistics and the or with a degree in Economics and Engineering Those degrees were the first and at the same time highest non Doctorate title in many disciplines before its gradual replacement by other Anglo Saxon inspired degrees From the level of academic study a Magister or Diplom has to be considered equivalent to a master s degree and marks the end of four to six years of studying with the writing of a final thesis similar to a master s thesis A special kind of examination is the It is not an academic degree but a government licensing examination that future doctors teachers lawyers solicitors judges public prosecutors patent attorneys and pharmacists have to pass in order to be eligible to work in their profession Students usually study at university for 4 6 years before they take the first Staatsexamen Afterwards teachers and jurists go on to work in their future jobs for two years before they are able to take the second Staatsexamen which tests their practical abilities in their jobs The first Staatsexamen is at a level which is equivalent to a M Sc or M A Since 1999 the traditional degrees are gradually being replaced by s Bakkalaureus and s Master degrees see The main reasons for this change are to make degrees internationally comparable and to introduce degrees to the German system which take less time to complete German students typically take five years or more to earn a Magister or Diplom Some universities are still resistant to this change considering it a displacement of a venerable tradition for the pure sake of globalization Universities must fulfill the new standard by the end of 2007 In the future the or degree will no longer be awarded Doctorates are issued under a variety of names depending on the faculty e g Doktor der Naturwissenschaften Doctor of Natural Science Doktor der Rechtswissenschaften Doctor of Law Doktor der medizinischen Wissenschaft Doctor of Medicine Doktor der Philosophie Doctor of Philosophy to name just a few Multiple doctorates and honorary doctorates are often listed and even used in forms of address in German speaking countries A Diplom from a Universitat Magister Master s or Staatsexamen student can proceed to a doctorate The doctoral promotion e g to Dr rer nat Dr phil and others is equivalent to a Ph D degree and is therefore the highest academic degree to earn The doctorate s degree Dr med for has to be considered as different Medical students predominantly write their doctoral theses straight after they have completed studies like other students in other disciplines have to write a Diplom Magister or Master s thesis Sometimes incorrectly regarded as a degree the is an academic qualification in Germany and Austria that allows further teaching and research endorsement after a doctorate It is earned by writing a second thesis the Habilitationsschrift or presenting a portfolio of first author publications in an advanced topic The exact requirements for satisfying a Habilitation depend on individual universities The habil as it is abbreviated to represent that a habilitation has been awarded after the doctorate was traditionally the conventional qualification for serving at least as a Privatdozent e g PD Dr habil Lecturer in an academic professorship now called W2 and W3 Some German universities no longer require the Habilitation although preference may still be given to applicants who have this credential for academic posts in the more traditional fields අයර ලන තය In Ireland a is below the standard of the honours whilst the is taken after the bachelor degree The new National Framework of Qualifications adopted in 2003 replaced the National Dipoma with the Ordinary Bachelors degree The framework also clarifies that although the Higher Diploma is taken after the bachelor degree the learning outcomes are at the same level as for the Honours Bachelors Degree More technically a diploma is a document attesting that its bearer has satisfied certain study requirements as opposed to a degree being a status level in the academic community For this reason diplomas are awarded to the recipient while degrees are conferred upon the graduand who then becomes a graduate or the graduand is admitted to a degree Similarly a person has a diploma but a graduate is in a status It is also for this reason that study for diplomas can be at undergraduate or advanced level ඉත ල ය In Italy access to university is possible after gaining the high school degree called di maturita which is obtained at 19 years after 5 years of study in a particular high school focused on a certain subject e g liceo classico focus on classical subjects and includes ancient Greek and Latin liceo scientifico focus on scientific subjects but includes Latin and literature liceo linguistico for languages istituto tecnico for technics After the diploma one can enter university choosing any faculty e g physics medicine chemistry engineering architecture there is no requirement to complete a specific high school in order to access a particular faculty but most of the university program test to select students Almost all faculties nowadays offers two academic degrees A first degree called is obtained after 3 years of study and a short thesis on one subject The second degree called laurea Specialistica Magistrale LS LM can be obtained proceeding with usually two additional years of study and specializing in a particular branch of the chosen subject e g particle physics nuclear engineering etc The laurea magistrale is obtained after the discussion of a thesis which usually involves some academic research or an internship in a private company Only few students continue their university career after passing a public selection to 3 further years of Dottorato di ricerca equivalent to a Ph D mainly devoted to research with some compulsory courses the degree is also obtained after the discussion of a thesis on the results of the research done Alternatively after obtaining the laurea triennale and the laurea magistrale one can attend a so called Master first level Master after the laurea triennale second level Master after the laurea magistrale offered by universities and private organisations with a variety of subjects lengths and prices one year of Master in Italy can cost more than the fees paid for the entire preceding university education usually including a final internship in a company න දර ලන තය In the structure of academic studies was altered significantly in 1982 In this year the twee fase structuur Two Phase Structure was introduced by the Dutch Minister of Education Minister Wim Deetman With this two phase structure an attempt was made to standardise all the different studies and structure them to an identical timetable Additional effect was that students would be persuaded stringently to produce results within a preset timeframe or otherwise discontinue their studies The two phase structure is still in effect today and is in line with the In order for a Dutch student to get access to a university education he she has to complete the appropriate pre university secondary education Voorbereidend Wetenschappelijk Onderwijs 6 years There are other routes possible but only if the end level of the applicant is comparable to the VWO levels access to university education is granted For some studies specific end levels or disciplines are required e g graduating without physics biology and chemistry will make it impossible to follow an academic medicine study For some studies in the Netherlands a governmental determined is in place This is a limitation of the number of applicants to a specific study thus trying to control the eventual number of graduates The most renowned studies for their numerus clausus are the medicine and dentistry Every year a combination of good pre university secondary education grades luck and some additional conditions determine who can start such a numerus clausus study and who can not A study location and or university to graduate from are appointed and are not subject to free choice In practice it is only possible on very exclusive grounds e g family history connected to a certain university and seldom granted For example all the members of the studied at due to the historic ties between the Dutch Royal family and this university Almost all are government supported universities with only very few privately owned universities in existence i e one in and all others in theology is the oldest founded in 1575 Before the Netherlands existed out of loose provinces i e The Low Countries which were occupied and ruled by other powers like Spain The occupying monarchs did not encourage education at or allowed the foundation of a university locally and preferred moulding educated people at their own institutions Therefore marking the victory on the Spanish William of Orange William the Silent underlined the founding of the by granting Leiden rights to found As mentioned before all university studies in the Netherlands have in principle the same length four years and exist out of two phases The propedeutische fase 1 2 years Should the student not be able to finish this phase in the given time frame of 2 years than he or she has to abandon the study and will not be allowed to continue this or another study After finishing this phase the student follows another two years study after which the student has a level equivalent to the Anglo Saxon BSc BA or LLB The doctorale fase 3 4 years Completing the first phase successfully gives the student access to the second phase Here the student is expected to conclude the phase within the given time frame of 3 to 4 years Again failure to finish within the time given will lead to discontinuation This phase is concluded with the doctoraal examen doctoral exam This is not similar to any type of doctoral exam that would grant the student with any type of PhD title Successful completion however does grant the student the Dutch degree of doctorandus abbreviated as drs This Dutch title is more and more replaced by the Anglo Saxon titles MSc MA and LLM depending on the area of study For medical students the doctorandus degree is not equivalent to the MD degree in the Anglo Saxon culture and does not give the medical student to opportunity to treat patients For this a minimum of two years additional study specialisation is required The correct notation for a Dutch physician who did complete his or her medical studies but did not pursue a PhD study is drs e g drs Jansen and not dr In medicine like with many other disciplines nothing is noted additionally to clarify the specific discipline although there are some exceptions Thus a doctorandus in law is allowed to carry the title meester master abbreviated as mr Jansen and some studies like for example physics grant the title ingenieur engineer noted as ir Jansen Not uncommon the Dutch drs abbreviation can cause much confusion in other countries since it is perceived as a person who has a PhD in multiple disciplines Nowadays many Dutch universities offer specific MSc studies thus integrating into and merging with the international scientific community In addition on many Dutch universities lessons hoor colleges or complete are conducted in English in stead of Dutch After successfully obtaining a drs or MSc degree the student has the opportunity to follow a PhD study to eventually obtain a doctorate These too are structured ideally according to a pre set time schedule of 4 to 6 years During these 4 6 years the PhD student has to be mentored by a or more common multiple professors The PhD study has to be concluded with at least a scientific thesis that has to be defended to a gathering of his her peers in practice the Board of the with guest professors from other faculties and or universities added More and more common practice nowadays and in some disciplines even mandatory is that during the PhD study the student writes and submits scientific publications to peer reviewed journals that eventually need to be accepted for publication Although the number of publications is often debated and varies considerably a minimum of four one per year of PhD study is quite accepted in the field of the exact sciences physics chemistry technology and medicine After successful conclusion of a PhD study the student is allowed the title of doctor abbreviated as dr This is similar for all Dutch PhD graduates The discipline in which the PhD is obtained is not specifically noted Hence for example a PhD in law medicine or mathematics all put the same abbreviation in front of their name e g dr Jansen As with the doctorandus degree nothing is noted behind the name of the PhD to specify the discipline Stacking of titles as seen in other countries like for example Germany Prof Dr Dr Dr Musterfrau is highly uncommon in the Netherlands and not well received PhD graduates or doctor s can proceed to teach at universities as Universitair Docent UD With time experience and or achievement this can evolve to a position as Universitair Hoofd Docent UHD Officially an UHD still works under the supervision of a hoog leraar the head of the department and commonly a The position of hoog leraar is the highest possible scientific position at a university and equal to the US full professor In the Netherlands the title of noted as prof Jansen or professor Jansen is connected to ones function In practice professors are head of a scientific department of a university faculty However this is not a given it is also possible that a department is headed by a plain PhD based on knowledge achievement and expertise Officially it is not possible to use the title if not connected to a university Should a decide to leave the university thus he or she also loses the privilege to use the title of In practice however different customs are observed Rule of thumb however is that retired professors often still note the title in front of their name where as people still active switch to a non university job must switch from the professor title to the PhD or dr abbreviation Contrary to some other European countries in the Netherlands academic titles are rarely used outside of academia and are not listed on official documentation e g passport and drivers licence as for example in Germany Dutch academic titles however are legally protected and can only be used by graduates from Dutch institutions of higher education Illegal use is considered an offence and subject to legal prosecution Holders of foreign degrees therefore need special permission before being able to use a Dutch title Article 7 23 of the Dutch Higher Education Act provides the Informatie Beheer Groep with the possibility to grant such a permission න ර ව Prior to 2003 there were around 50 different degrees and corresponding education programs within the Norwegian higher education system In 2003 a reform was instituted to replace this older system with an international system For example many degrees had titles that included the Latin term candidatus candidata The second part of the title usually consisted of a Latin word corresponding to the profession or training These degrees were all retired in 2003 The reform of higher education in Norway Kvalitetsreformen The Quality Reform was passed in the Norwegian Parliament the in 2001 and carried out during the 2003 2004 academic year It introduced standard periods of study and the titles master and bachelor The system differentiates between a free master s degree and a master s degree in technology The latter corresponds to the former sivilingenior degree not to be confused with a degree in civil engineering which is but one of many degrees linked to the title sivilingenior which is still in use for new graduates who can chose to also use the old title All pre 2001 doctoral degree titles were replaced with the title Philosophical Doctor degree written philosophiae doctor instead of the traditional doctor philosophiae The title is a substantially higher degree than the PhD and is reserved for those who qualify for such a degree without participating in an organized doctoral degree program ප ලන තය In the system is similar to the German one For instance confers the following university degrees and titles licencjat title the equivalent of a Bachelor s degree granted after at least 3 years of study inzynier title the equivalent of engineer s degree granted after at least 3 5 years of study magister title the equivalent of a Master s degree granted after 5 years of study or 2 years of additional study by holders of a previous degree doktor degree Doctor s degree Ph D doktor habilitowany degree Polish degree requires approval by an external ministerial body The profesor Professor s title is officially conferred by the ර ස ය ව ය ක ර නය ආද රටවල In ර ස ය ව and some other they strongly distinguish educational kinds of academic degrees and real academic degrees connected with scientific researches The educational degrees are awarded after finishing college education There are several levels of education one must choose between 2nd and 3rd year usually on the 3rd year of study usually takes 4 years of college minimum level to be recognized as having Higher Education is awarded after 5 years of college 4 1 Magister degree is awarded after 6 years of college 4 2 Usually Specialist or Magister degrees incorporates Bachelor degree in them but only high level degree is stated in final diploma Specialist and Bachelor degree require taking final state exams and written work on practical application of studied skills or research thesis usually 50 70 pages and is roughly equivalent to First level academic degree is called say candidate of physical mathematical sciences or candidate of engineering sciences candidate of historical sciences etc This degree requires extensive research efforts taking some classes publications in peer reviewed academic journals usually 5 publications suffice and writing in depth thesis 80 200 pages Special scientific council of notable specialists in the field then reviews the thesis the written opinions of several outside referees and upon approval recommends the thesis for defense Upon open defense in front of the same council the members of the council vote it takes dominant majority 2 3 to pass and then a chair writes a statement on recommending to award the degree candidate of sciences to the defendant All paperwork including thesis is then sent to so called which upon review makes final approval and then issues the diploma of candidate of science The candidate of sciences degree is roughly equivalent to US Ph D degree although it requires longer research efforts more publications actually in US publications are not required for Ph D degree wider exposure and larger peer pool to pass Finally there is a Doktor nauk degree in Russia and some former USSR academic environment This degree is sought after by established scientists who made discovery level contributions into certain field formally who established new direction or new field in science It requires discovery of new phenomenon or development of new theory or essential development of new direction etc This usually takes a decade or two of hard work after receiving candidate of sciences degree an extensive list of publications in peer reviewed academic journals usually 50 300 papers publishing a few monographs extensive participation in various panels and peers journals conferences grant award panels etc and establishing a school of candidates of sciences under own supervision so at least a few of your students have received candidacy degrees working with you on your discovery or in your new field direction It requires writing a deep and advanced thesis usually 300 800 pages and defending it in front of special council of prominent scientists in the field or in adjacent fields if the field discovery is completely new in a similar to candidate of sciences defense manner Upon voting all paperwork is again sent to the Highest Attestation Commission which upon approval awards the diploma of doctor of sciences There is no equivalent of this doctor of sciences degree in US academic system It is roughly equivalent to in Germany France Austria and some other European countries ස ප ඥ ඥය Before the the are Diplom Bachelor Degree for 3 year and Licenciado for 5 year but after it has changed to Grado for all universitaries Except for Medical and Architecture that will be directly master still under discussion if they can certify min 5 years professional experience and Master to the ones who make later the postgrade master courses 60 to 120 ECTS credits in one or two years and Doctor if you continue studies Very Important must look to make official Master with ETCS credit because some university are making their own Masters without this ETCS credits out of the but this lastones are only like the Diploma http en wikipedia org wiki Diploma Sept 08 Also see differences between diplom and diploma ස ව ඩනය ම ම ඡ දය ප ළ ල ක ර ම අවශ යය කර ණ එකත කර ඔබට ද සහ ය ව ය හ ක ය 2008 ම ය ස ව ස ටරලන තය Before the because there are three official languages in Switzerland German French and Italian the Universities degrees were different depending on the language In French speaking universities the first academic degree was the 4 to 5 years of study equivalent to the in the UK or the USA The postgraduate degree was the diplome d etudes approfondies 1 2 years of study equivalent to the Master of Advanced Studies degree In the Swiss German Universities the first degree was called a 4 year degree and the second was the In the Italian speaking University the first degree was called a 4 year degree the second was the which took 1 2 years The Doctoral s degree is the last stage at all the universities it requires 3 5 years depending on the field ය ක ර නය Diploma from Ukrainian University 2005 This subsection is for an image on the right hand side For information see subsection Russian Ukraine and some other former USSR republics එක සත ර ජධ න ය එ ගලන තය හ ව ල සය මහ බ ර ත න ය ත ල ප රථම උප ධ ය වසර ත නක අධ යන ක ලයකට අයත ව කල උප ධ ය BA ඉ ජ න ර උප ධ ය BEng සහ ව ද ය උප ධ ය BSc ම ගණයට අයත ය ම ම උප ධ ය ප ත ස ම ර ථ හතරකට බ ද ඒ ම ස ය ප රථම ප ත ස ම ර ථය 1st ද වන ප ත ස ම ර ථය ක ටස ද කකට බ ද ද වන ප ත ඉහළ ස ම ර ථය 2 1 ද වන ස ත පහළ ස ම ර ථය 2 2 ත න වන ප ත ස ම ර ථය 3rd යම ශ ෂ යය ක අද ල ක සලත ද ක ව මට අප හ සත ව වහ ත එහ ත න වත න වත ප න ස ට ම න අද ල ලක ණ මට ටමට ලග ව ව ට ඔහ ට හ ඇයට ග රව උප ධ යක ව න වට ස ම න ය ස ම ර තයක පමණක හ ම ව The Graduateship post nominal GCGI awarded by the City amp Guilds of London Institute is mapped to a British Honours degree Some students study an integrated Master s which is still a first degree This takes four years of study and is usually designated by the subject such as for engineering MPhys for physics MMath for mathematics and so on Grades are as above The 4 year MEng degree in particular has now become the standard first degree in engineering in the top UK universities replacing the older 3 year BEng Unlike the case in the United States due to earlier specialisation in education may take only one year of full time study and the usual amount of time spent working for a Ph D is three years full time Therefore whilst the usual amount of time spent studying from Bachelors level through to doctorate in the United States is nine years it is in most cases only seven in the United Kingdom and may be just six since a Master s degree is not always a precondition for embarking on a PhD Recently there has been a significant rise in the number of courses offering Postgraduate Diplomas often in very specific vocationally related subjects Many institutions eg The Open University offer these courses over one year with an additional year or two required for the award of a Master s The popularity of these courses is in part due to legislative requirements to demonstrate managerial competence in public sector related functions A can be awarded for having completed two years of study in what is usually a vocational discipline The Foundation degree is comparable to an associate s degree in the United States and can be awarded by a University or College of Higher Education ස ක ට ලන තය The standard in ස ක ට ලන තය is either a which only awarded by the whereas a is awarded by all other modern institutions for arts and humanities subjects or a for natural and social science subjects These can either be studied at general or honours levels A general degree MA or BSc takes three years to complete an honours degree MA Hons or BSc Hons takes four years to complete The general degree is not in a specific subject but involves study across a range of subjects within the relevant faculty The honours degree involves two years of study at a sub honours level in which a range of subjects within the relevant faculty are studied and then two years of study at honours level which is specialised in a single field for example classics history chemistry biology etc This also reflects the broader scope of the final years of where traditionally five are studied compared to typically three English or Welsh The Higher is a one year qualification as opposed to the two years of A Levels which accounts for Scottish honours degrees being a year longer than those in England add an optional final year of secondary education bringing students up to the level of their A Level counterparts students with strong A Levels or Advanced Highers may be offered entry directly into the second year at Scottish universities Honours for MA or BSc are classified into three classes First class honours Second class honours divided into Division one 2 1 Division two 2 2 Third class honours Students who complete all the requirements for an honours degree but do not receive sufficient merit to be awarded third class honours may be awarded a Special Degree Postgraduate may be offered in some subjects however unlike England and Wales these are not designated Master of Arts as this is an undergraduate degree Postgraduate degrees in arts and humanities subjects are usually designated MLitt in natural and social sciences as MSc Non doctoral postgraduate research degrees are usually designated MPhil or MRes First doctoral research degrees in arts science and humanities subjects are usually designated Doctor of Philosophy PhD ය ම වMakdisi George April June 1989 Scholasticism and Humanism in Classical Islam and the Christian West Journal of the American Oriental Society 109 2 175 182 175 77 Note In the U S and Europe except U K the M D Program of Study is a full time four to five year course that requires a prior bachelor s degree There are six or seven year straight M D programs after high school similar to straight Ph D programs in some Universities Note In the U S some pharmacy schools offer the PharmD as a six year program which does not require a prior bachelor s degree and is more akin to a professional Master s degree while currently there is debate among the pharmacy community and pressure from the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy to make schools offer it as a 4 year post bachelors program Note In the UK and the Commonweatlh except Canada the M D degree is a graduate research degree distinct from the professional medical MBBS or degree Association of American Universities Data Exchange Accessed May 26 2008 National Science Foundation 2006 Time to Degree of U S Research Doctorate Recipients 2016 03 08 at the Wayback Machine InfoBrief Science Resource Statistics NSF 06 312 2006 p 7 under Data notes mentions that the J D is a professional doctorate San Diego County Bar Association 1969 Ethics Opinion 1969 5 2003 04 11 at the Wayback Machine Accessed May 26 2008 under other references discusses differences between academic and professional doctorate and statement that the J D is a professional doctorate University of Utah 2006 University of Utah The Graduate School Graduate Handbook 2008 06 26 at the Wayback Machine Accessed May 28 2008 the J D degree is listed under doctorate degrees German Federal Ministry of Education Accessed May 26 2008 report by the German Federal Ministry of Education analysing the Chronicle of Higher Education from the U S and stating that the J D is a professional doctorate Encyclopedia Britannica 2002 Encyclopedia Britannica 3 962 1a the J D is listed among other doctorate degrees Wadsack Ingrid Kasparovsky Heinz 2004 PDF Higher Education in Austria 2nd ed Austrian Federal Ministry of Education Science and Culture ISBN 3 85456 453 8 archived from the original on 2007 08 11 http web archive org web 20070811023740 http www fulbright at dokumente us citizens general hssystem 04e pdf Informatie Beheer Groep IB Groep under commission of the Dutch Ministery of Education Culture and Science http www ibgroep nl International visitors Welcome asp 2007 09 29 at the Wayback Machine More information on legislation on http www ibgroep nl International visitors Diploma assessment diploma assessment asp 2011 07 19 at the Wayback Machine Application forms via http www ib groep nl Images 5263E KS 01 tcm7 6860 pdf permanent dead link Rectors Conference of the Swiss Universities http www crus ch information programmes bologne ects equivalence html L 1 ප රත ෂ ඨ පනය 2009 03 18 ම ව ත බලන බ හ ර සබ ද ම Academic degreesve U S ABA ABS AOS AS Australia U K or or or or or or or or or or or or Oxon Oxon AE CE ChE ME MD US Doctoral degrees PhD MD out of US and Canada DPhil