Is it possible to do MSc and BSc at the same time?

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The discussion centers around the academic qualifications of a professor, specifically the timeline of her degrees. The professor's biography states she received her Ph.D. in Engineering in 2007, alongside her B.Sc. and M.Sc. degrees in 2001. This raises questions about whether she completed her B.Sc. and M.Sc. simultaneously, possibly through a dual degree program, which is common in some universities. Participants explore the implications of this timeline, including the potential for tuition differences and the possibility of receiving degrees at different times due to administrative delays. They also discuss international variations in degree structures, such as the "diplom" system in Europe and the undergraduate master's programs in Australia. The conversation highlights the complexities of academic degree timelines and the various systems in place across different countries and institutions.
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I was looking through my college's staff listing and came across one of my professors. I read a short biography and it read like:
She received her Ph.D. degree in Engineering from (censored) in 2007, M.Sc and B. Sc. from (censored) in 2001.

What does this mean? That she graduated with an MSc the same time she completed her BSc?
 
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Well, I assume:

BSc: 3 Years (2001 - 2003)
MSc: 1 Year (2004)
PhD: 3 Years (2005-2007)
 
I read it as:

B.S. received 2001
M.S. received 2001
Ph.D. received 2007

Some universities offer dual B.S./M.S. programs in which the student receives a master's at the same time as a bachelor's by staying (usually) an extra year. In other words, it took the professor 5 years (assumed, since that's typical) to earn her B.S. and M.S., and 6 additional years to earn her Ph.D.
 
Is there any difference between delaying graduation for one year just so you can receive both MS and BS together or just doing BS first then followed by MS immediately?
 
Defennnder said:
Is there any difference between delaying graduation for one year just so you can receive both MS and BS together or just doing BS first then followed by MS immediately?
The only difference I could think of would be tuition, if the tuition for graduate schools is much more than undergrad. In that case, one would stay an undergrad while taking graduate level courses, and then apply to the graduate program for the last year to satisfy the minimum requirements for registration.
 
I bet it's a typo.
 
There are programs for this. The Naval Academy has one where you go full time to the Academy and part time to Maryland during your junior and senior years, getting your BS in May and MS in December.
 
It can also be that she was AWARDED the BS in 2001 but actually completed it in 2000. I don't know what it is like in the US but here it can occasionally take a couple of months (or more) to get all the paperwork sorted even after you have fulfilled all the requirements.
 
Did the professor do her undergrad/MSc in Germany? (or any number of other European countries with a similar system?) A "diplom" there is equivalent to an American B.Sc + M.Sc.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diplom
 
  • #10
I don't know how it works in other universities/countries, but I am doing one of the undergraduate masters courses mentioned. I get awarded an M.Sc at the end of it but no B.Sc
 
  • #11
matthyaouw said:
I don't know how it works in other universities/countries, but I am doing one of the undergraduate masters courses mentioned. I get awarded an M.Sc at the end of it but no B.Sc

I thought undergrad masters degrees were MSci degrees, in order to differentiate them between the year long taught masters degrees (MSc)?
 
  • #12
Actually mine's an Mphysgeog as it's a physical geography degree, but that's a bit of a mouth full so I normally just say MSc if anyone asks. I didn't know that differentiation existed.
 
  • #13
Hmm ok thanks guys. Just wondering.
 
  • #14
Person in question is Ghim Wei Ho ( http://www.esp.nus.edu.sg/Research/Biography_Dr%20Ho.htm ) at NUS.

Not sure how it is in Singapore but in Australia it's possible to do a Bach. of Engineering and a Masters of Biomedical Engineering (coursework) in one five year stretch and graduate with both degrees at the conclusion.
So perhaps they have some arrangement like that there (or one of the many plausable explanations postd above).
 
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