Friday, April 2, 2010

United States BS

In the United States, a Bachelor of Science degree may be a more specialized version of B.A., with more focus on the subject and less on a broad liberal arts background; for example, a B.S. in economics may require several more advanced economics courses than a B.A. in economics and possibly more support courses (such as statistics), while requiring fewer lower-level liberal arts classes that do not directly relate the major in question. The B.S. is also frequently used for professional areas of study such as engineering, journalism, accounting, and advertising. At least seven American schools (Caltech, Embry-Riddle, Babson, Georgia Tech, MIT, NMT and HMC) and five service academies (United States Military Academy, United States Naval Academy, United States Air Force Academy, United States Merchant Marine Academy and United States Coast Guard Academy) award the BS for all subjects. On the other hand, many schools (especially Liberal Arts colleges) do not offer a BS at all.

1 comment:

  1. In U.S. mostly the difference is BA requires a foreign language traditionally German, Spanish or French but more recently other languages are accepted.

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