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Encyclopedia > Double major

A double-degree programme, sometimes called a conjoint degree, dual degree, or simultaneous degree programme, involves a student working for two different university degrees in parallel, either at the same institution or at different institutions (sometimes in different countries), completing them in less time than it would take to earn them separately. The two degrees might be in the same subject area (especially when the course is split between countries), or in two different subjects. Undergraduate double-degree programmes are more common in some countries than others, and are generally found in countries whose higher-education systems follow the British model. Master's double-degree programmes are more wide-spread. Interest in double-degree programmes between member nations has spread in the European Union, as the gaining of qualifications from more than one country is seen as an advantage in the European labour market. In some educational systems, an undergraduate is a post-secondary student pursuing a Bachelors degree. ... A masters degree is an academic degree usually awarded for completion of a postgraduate or graduate course of one to three years in duration. ...


Typically in a double-degree programme both of the participating institutions reduce the amount of time required to be spent at each. For example, a joint Master of Business Administration/J.D. typically takes four years rather than the five years it would take to complete each programme individually. Common postgraduate double degrees are M.B.A./J.D. degrees, as well as M.B.A. and J.D. degrees combined with M.A. fields such as politics, economics, urban planning, and international relations. Many medical schools also offer joint M.D. degrees with J.D. and M.B.A. programmes, as well as with a range of M.A. programs. To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ... J.D. redirects here; for alternate uses, see J.D. (disambiguation) J.D. is an abbreviation for the Latin Juris Doctor, also called a Doctor of Law or Doctorate of Jurisprudence, and is the law degree typically awarded by an accredited U.S. law school after successfully completing three years... Degree ceremony at Cambridge. ...


Double degrees should not be confused with double-honours, double-major, or joint degrees, nor with the occasional practice of awarding a further qualification with a worked-for (especially research) degree, nor with the awarding of a single degree by multiple institutions. Double majors or dual majors consist of two majors attached to a single degree, as opposed to two separate degrees each with its own field of study.


In Canada, many teacher candidates study simultaneously for a Bachelor of Arts and a Bachelor of Education. These are known as "concurrent-education" programmes. A Bachelor of Arts (B.A. or A.B., from the Latin Artium Baccalaureus) is an undergraduate academic degree awarded for a course or program in the arts and/or sciences. ... A Bachelor of Education (BEd) is an undergraduate academic degree which qualifies the graduate as a teacher in schools. ...


3-2 programmes

In the United States, a 3-2 programme is a formal double degree undergraduate programme run by two separate colleges or universities. In such a programme, a student studies for three years at one school followed by two years at the other school. The student is awarded two bachelor's degrees at the end of the five-year period, one from each school, and generally of different types (e.g., a B.A. and a B.S.). Typically the first school is a liberal arts college and the second is a university offering an engineering programme. In the history of education, the seven liberal arts comprise two groups of studies, the trivium and the quadrivium. ... Engineering is the application of scientific and technical knowledge to solve human problems. ...


The term is occasionally applied to a situation wherein a person earns two degrees from separate colleges of the same university. A fifth year of study is usually required in such a case, but the student spends all five years at one institution.


Sample institutions

The following is a short sample of universities (ordered alphabetically) offering double-degree programmes, giving an idea of the variety of forms.

  • Undergraduate degrees
    • Simon Fraser University, Canada. Offers students a dual-degree programme offering a course which awards degrees from Simon Fraser and Zhejiang University in China.[1]
    • University of Santo Tomas, Philippines. Offers a "double-degree course that combines subject offerings for a Bachelor of Arts in Social Sciences, and a Bachelor of Science in Secondary Education" PDF file
    • Singapore Management University. "Under the double degree programme, a student can graduate in four years with two degrees".[2]
    • University of Stirling, Scotland, offers double degrees in which students work for degrees from Stirling and either Passau or IECS Strasbourg: "The two degrees are awarded simultaneously, when students have completed the requirements of both universities."[3]
    • University of Trento, Italy. Both undergraduate and graduate degrees. "The double degree programme is founded on the principle of linkage between two different university systems in Europe [...] The double degree programme also offers the student an opportunity to obtain two qualifications – an Italian degree (laurea, which corresponds to the bachelor) or specialist degree (laurea specialistica, which corresponds to the master) and the corresponding degree from the foreign university – and thereby acquire qualifications that facilitate access to the labour market." [4]
    • Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand. Their Web page gives a very clear explanation of the difference between double degrees and double-major degrees.[5]
    • University of Waterloo and Wilfrid Laurier University, Canada. "Offers a unique joint double degree program that combines Honours Bachelor of Business Administration(WLU) and Honours Bachelor of Mathematics(UW)." [6] [7]
    • University of Wollongong, Australia. "A double degree is defined by the University of Wollongong Course Rules as 'an approved course leading to the conferral of two degrees as separate awards upon a candidate who has complied with the Course Requirements for double degrees and the two individual Course Requirements inclusively'." [8]
  • Graduate degrees
    • Columbia Law School, USA. "In 1994, Columbia was the first U.S. Law School to establish a double degree program providing its participants with both a U.S. Juris Doctor and a foreign law degree."

  Results from FactBites:
 
Majority - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (369 words)
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A majority is more than 25.5, or 26; one more than half is 26.5, and since there must be at least that many votes on the winning side, and a half vote is not possible, that makes the requirement 27.
Double majority - a majority of votes in a majority of states.
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Double majority is used in the United States for some votes on issues such as a tax levy or bond.
Double majorities are also frequently used in municipal annexations, wherein majorities of both the residents in the annexing territory, and the territory to be annexed, must support the annexation.
In the European Union, double majority voting is a form of Qualified Majority Voting which is proposed in the Treaty establishing a constitution for Europe.
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