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13 January, 01:36

Which is the difference between an associate's degree and a bachelor's degree?

An associate's degree is usually earned during secondary education, but a bachelor's degree is usually earned during post-secondary education.

An associate's degree is earned by completing on-the-job training, but a bachelor's degree is earned before training begins.

An associate's degree is earned in a college where a student studies many subjects at once, but a bachelor's degree is earned in a career college.

An associate's degree is earned by completing a two-year college education, but a bachelor's degree is earned by completing four years of college.

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  1. 13 January, 04:06
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    An associate degree is an undergraduate academic degree awarded by community colleges, junior colleges, technical colleges, bachelor's degree-granting colleges, and universities upon completion of a course of study usually lasting two years.

    A bachelor's degree (also baccalaureate, from Modern Latin baccalaureatus) is usually earned for an undergraduate course of study that normally requires three to five years of study (depending on institution and field of study).
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