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    Home»Education»What Are The College Degree Levels?
    Education

    What Are The College Degree Levels?

    By TeachThought StaffApril 1, 2026No Comments2 Mins Read
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    Overview of associate, bachelor’s, master’s, doctoral, and professional degrees—definitions, common titles, typical length/credits, example jobs, and .edu sources. [Updated]

    Associate Degree (≈2 years; ~60 semester credits)

    Definition: Two-year undergraduate degree offering general education and/or applied career preparation.

    Popular titles: AA, AS, AAS

    Example jobs: Dental hygienist, radiologic technologist, paralegal, network support specialist

    Sources:
    University of Washington ·
    Portland Community College

    Bachelor’s Degree (≈4 years; ~120 semester credits)

    Definition: Four-year undergraduate degree combining general education and a major field of study.

    Popular titles: BA, BS, BFA, BBA, BSN

    Example jobs: K–12 teacher* , accountant, software developer, civil/mechanical engineer, RN (BSN)

    Sources:
    Arizona State University ·
    University of Maryland Global Campus

    Master’s Degree (≈1–3 years; ~30–60 credits)

    Definition: Graduate degree focused on advanced specialization via coursework and/or thesis/project.

    Popular titles: MA, MS, MEd, MBA, MPH, MSW, MPA, MEng

    Example jobs: Speech-language pathologist, school counselor/assistant principal, data scientist (often preferred), epidemiologist

    Sources:
    Northeastern University ·
    Ohio State University

    Doctoral Degree (≈4–7+ years; field-dependent)

    Definition: Highest academic degree; advanced coursework plus original research (dissertation) or advanced practice project.

    Popular titles: PhD, EdD, PsyD, DNP

    Example jobs: University professor/researcher, superintendent, clinical psychologist, advanced nursing leadership

    Source:
    University of Illinois College of Education

    Professional Degrees (Licensure-Track; length varies by field)

    Definition: Graduate/professional credentials that prepare graduates for licensed practice in specific fields.

    Popular titles: JD, MD/DO, PharmD, DDS/DMD, DPT, DVM, PA (master’s)

    Typical lengths (examples): JD ≈3 yrs; MD 4 yrs + residency; DPT ≈3 yrs; PharmD ≈4 yrs

    Example jobs: Attorney, physician, pharmacist, dentist, physical therapist, veterinarian, physician assistant

    Sources:
    Harvard Law School (JD) ·
    Stanford Medicine (MD) ·
    UCSF (PharmD) ·
    USC (DPT)

    *Most states require a bachelor’s plus an approved teacher-prep program and state licensure for K–12 teaching.

    TeachThought Staff 2026-04-01 14:29:00

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