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What is the difference between a BA and a MA in Eng - Scot
I want to study History at Uni next September and most of the UK universitys do a 3 year BA. However Galsgow and Edinburgh only do a 4 year MA, but it appears to be the equilivent of the engish MA.
anyone clarify for totally confused please
anyone clarify for totally confused please
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Explains it a bit. Not a lot though.
but the letter M in front rather than B will convey to any prospective employer in the future that it is a higher level qualification.
I think people were trying to change it becasue it was an entirely undergraduate course, rather than being a 3 year completed Batchelors followed by a separate Masters course.
Mine was the same - I didn't graduate and recieve a Batchelors after 3 years then do a separate Masters course. I had the option after 3 years of graduating with a BEng or continuing for a further year to gain a Masters.
Explains it a bit. Not a lot though.
but the letter M in front rather than B will convey to any prospective employer in the future that it is a higher level qualification.
I think people were trying to change it becasue it was an entirely undergraduate course, rather than being a 3 year completed Batchelors followed by a separate Masters course.
Mine was the same - I didn't graduate and recieve a Batchelors after 3 years then do a separate Masters course. I had the option after 3 years of graduating with a BEng or continuing for a further year to gain a Masters.
Basically an MA is by an ancient Uni like Glasgow. And a BA is from a modern uni. An MA is NOT a masters, and it doesnt take an extra year in Scotland because of that. It's an extra year in Scotland because the English say that a-levels are the equivalent to Scottish 1st year university, therefore why do it again?
The Ancient Scottish Universities MA degree is a 'Magistrum Artium', but not a post-graduate degree. It has a history of almost 600 years behind it. It being styled MA rather than BA has nothing to do with A-levels versus Highers, and everything to do with a long venerable tradition and custom going back to the medieval and renaissance foundation of the Universities of St. Andrews (1411), Glasgow (1451), Aberdeen (1495), and Edinburgh (1582). The University of Dundee (1967) also offers it because it was formally an internal part of St. Andrews University.
It is also qualitatively different from the English 3 year Honours BA/ Newer Scottish Universities 4 year BA's because the Honours component is over two years, not one.
It is also qualitatively different from the English 3 year Honours BA/ Newer Scottish Universities 4 year BA's because the Honours component is over two years, not one.
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