• Canopyflyer@lemmy.world
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    7 个月前

    Where do you need a Masters to attain a PhD? Honest question, I just never heard of it before.

    My wife attained her MD/PhD from the University of Chicago/Pritzker and does not have a Masters. She’s on the MD/PhD committee for her university and they do not require anything other than a BS in the field of study.

    With that said, it probably isn’t much of a stretch to just get a Masters in the way to a PhD.

    Me? I’m depriving some poor village of its idiot. I have a BS and that’s it.

    • beerclue@lemmy.world
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      7 个月前

      In the EU it’s usually like that. 3 years for a bachelor’s, 2 years for a master’s, only then you can start pursuing a phd.

      I graduated in 2005, and back then we had a different system, where I did a single 5 year program for a computer science degree (engineering), that today is the equivalent of a master’s (diplom engineer). I could have continued to go for a dedicated master’s, another 2 years, but I got lazy.

      • Amaltheamannen@lemmy.ml
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        7 个月前

        This is true in Sweden. Though by the 5 year program you might be Swedish too. // Got a civilingenjörsexamen

      • KISSmyOS@feddit.de
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        7 个月前

        In Germany you can officially start a phd program with a bachelor’s, and I assume it’s the same all over Europe, since the degrees are supposed to be compatible.
        No one does it without a master’s, and no prof will accept you into a phd program without one, but theoretically on paper it’s not needed.

    • Please_Do_Not@lemm.ee
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      7 个月前

      Definitely depends on the field. Most “humanities” studies require a masters first, although for that reason many PhD programs include the step of getting your masters so it can all be done as a single track. So still a standard ~6 year program but you get both, masters after the first 3 and then PhD after 3 more. I’ve only ever run with folks in humanities I’m realizing, so I didn’t even realize there were PhDs you could get without a masters

      • Dr. Bob@lemmy.ca
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        7 个月前

        But to his point the UK is the place I know that will take a three year undergrad for a PhD program.

      • Canopyflyer@lemmy.world
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        7 个月前

        I get that this is the Internet.

        But how about this one time, we all converse as adults.

        How does that sound?

        An adult response would have been:

        “Virtually all European universities require a Masters to attain a PhD.”

        This is Lemmy and not Reddit after all.

    • wandermind@sopuli.xyz
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      7 个月前

      There are roughly speaking two kinds of systems. The kind of system where Bachelor is the default degree you get from university, and you can go on to get a Masters and/or a doctorate. And the other kind of system where the default university degree is a combined Bachelor and Masters, and you can study further to get a doctorate. The latter kind is in use in a lot of continental Europe, at least.

    • Dr. Bob@lemmy.ca
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      7 个月前

      I came from a very large lab; 18 post-docs, and half a dozen grad students. The general observation about the PhD portion of the MD/PhD program is that it tends to be very programmatic research. Typically applying a known technique to a neglected but not novel area. The straight PhDs had much higher expectations for novelty and depth. The MD/PhDs were out in three and the PhDs were five to six.

      • Canopyflyer@lemmy.world
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        7 个月前

        Someone should have told my wife’s program that.

        But I can understand how that would happen.

        Today she’s looking to stress cells in a lab to promote a mis-folded protein response that mimics how it happens in the body. At least that’s how far my IT guy understanding goes. She’s found herself running a BSL 3 lab working with nasty micro organisms and that is not her field. It’s just the path her research lead he down.