Graduate school

A graduate school is the school that a college student may attend after completion of his undergraduate education in order to obtain a degree higher than a bachelor's degree. Degrees range from master's degrees (M.A., M.S./M.Sc., M.Ed., etc.), doctorate (Ph.D., Ed.D., D.A., D.Sc., D.M.A., Th.D., etc.) or other postgraduate qualification (MBA), such as a graduate certificate, as well as some professional degrees. There are also a variety of subject fields for which one goes to graduate school: mathematics, biology, chemistry, physics, computer science, philosophy, economics, etc. The term graduate school, however, does not refer to medical school and only occasionally refers to law school or business school. Graduate schools are also a part of quaternary education, together with postdoctorate research, and a graduate school experience often involves a significant component of original research, including the writing and defense of a thesis or dissertation.

Although graduate school programs are distinct experiences from undergraduate degree programs, graduate instruction (in Australia, the United States, and other countries) is often offered by the same faculty and departments as teach undergraduate courses. As opposed to undergraduate programs, though, it is rare for graduate students to take coursework outside their specific field of study. Some institutions, however, do designate separate graduate faculty and divisions.

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See also: Graduate school, Australia, Bachelor's degree, Biology, Business school, Chemistry, College, Computer science, Coursework