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UndergraduateIn some educational systems, an undergraduate is a post-secondary education student pursuing a Bachelor's degree. Students of higher degrees are known as postgraduates (or often simply Graduate student). In the United States, most undergraduate education takes place at four-year colleges or University. Students in their first, second, third, and fourth years of study are often called, respectively, freshmen, sophomores, juniors, and seniors (although some institutions, such as many women's colleges, substitute "first-year" for "freshman" in an attempt to remain more gender-neutral). Some institutions (e.g. liberal-arts colleges) offer primarily or exclusively undergraduate education, while most universities offer graduate study as well. Successful completion of undergraduate work generally requires the completion of many courses of varying subject and difficulty, and a concentration or "College major" that focuses on a particular academic discipline. In the United Kingdom, ''undergraduate'' refers to the first three or four years of study towards a Bachelor's degree. In many other, particularly continental European systems, something like an "undergraduate" degree in the American sense does not exist. Other than in the US, where students engage in general studies during the first years of tertiary education and only specialize in a "major" during the last years of college, European students enroll in a specific course of studies they wish to pursue right from the beginning, as they are expected to have received a sound general education already on the secondary level, in a school such as a gymnasium (school) or lycée. At university, which they can enter at an age as early as 18 in many countries, they specialize in a subject field which they pursue in a curriculum of, in most cases, four or five years of studies. The fields available include those which are only taught as graduate degrees in the US, such as law, medicine or business administration. After completing the first degree, students can move on to doctoral studies. In many countries, the English distinction between a Bachelor's Degree's and Master's Degree's degree is only now being introduced by the Bologna process, meaning that the first degree would roughly correspond to a master's degree in the US or the UK. ==See also== *Higher education *Tertiary education Education UndergraduateNothing of this page but the very first sentence sounds like anything I've ever heard of before - the distinction of "colleges" that offer "lower-level courses" while only universites offer "upper-level courses"; the "Alma Mater" society - it means nothing to me. At the very least I think a lot of the "usually"s and so forth should be replaces with "sometimes"; it might be better to start this page over from scratch. -AJD See other meanings of words starting from letter: UUA | UB | UC | UD | UE | UF | UG | UH | UI | UJ | UK | UL | UM | UN | UO | UP | UR | US | UT | UW | UX | UY | UZ |Words begining with Undergraduate: Undergraduate Undergraduate Undergraduates Undergraduate_Ambassadors_Scheme Undergraduate_Ambassadors_Scheme Undergraduate_Council_of_Students Undergraduate_council_of_students Undergraduate_Finance_Board Undergraduate_Medicine_and_Health_Sciences_Admission_Test Undergraduate_Projects_Lab Undergraduate_Projects_Lab Undergraduate_student |
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