Film, Media & TV3 mins ago
University Degrees
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Does anyone know the difference between a MSc, and MSci and a specific degree title, (e.g. MPharm for Pharmacy)??? Is there a central place that explain all degree titles, ie. BSc, BA, BEng, MA, MEng, MSc, MMedSci, etc, etc. thanks!
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.For some unexplained reason, universities now seem to be using the abbreviation "MSci" for Master of Science, rather than the traditional MSc. There's a good Wikipedia article on
Masters' degrees, including a list of abbreviations, at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Master's_degree
Having myself now looked more closely at the Wikipedia article, I now see that MSci is used for what is called an Undergraduate Master, who has completed a 4 year undergraduate course. MSc is still used for the degree resulting from a post-graduate course, taken after the recipient has obtained a Bachelor's degree.
My undergraduate maths degree was 4 years long and I got a MMath (master of mathematics), some of my friends did a 4 year chemistry undergrad degree, they got an MSci. BEng is the result of a 3 yr engineering bachelors degree, if you do the 4th year you have an MEng. If you're interested, having one of these 'M' undergraduate degrees isn't equivalent to having a 3 year BSc plus an MSc. The 4th year is the same length as the first 3 years, ie 38 weeks (i think), not a full 52 week year like a postgraduate MSc or MA. The main point of these degrees is for students who are interested in a career in academia, often having a MMath or MSci means they don't have to do a postgraduate masters before starting their PhD. This saves them some time and often money too as funding can be hard to come by for postgrad masters, and you don't get a loan with a very low interest rate like you do when you're an undergrad.
I think that this trend towards undergraduate masters is so far limited to the scientific subjects. sorry if this has bored you!
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thanks for all the information, youve answered the question perfectly - this is exactly what I wanted to know. I'm about to start a 4 year undergraduate masters course in Pharmacology which has the title "MPharmacol(Hons)". Not exactly an impressive title!! Pharmacol is hardly an abbrevation for pharmacology.only 3 letters less! Thanks again