English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Someone who actually knows PLEASE!!!!!!!!!!!! How do you say Bachelor's Degree in spanish. How do you say Associate's Degree?

2006-06-29 10:37:13 · 11 answers · asked by Amy M 1 in Society & Culture Languages

11 answers

Licenciatura

2006-06-29 10:41:18 · answer #1 · answered by Brian L 2 · 2 3

Bachelor Degree In Spanish

2016-10-07 10:08:30 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You can't expect a universal translation, since vocabulary varies by country.

If you are trying to find the word that would likely be used by someone in this country in reference to a Bachelor's Degree, then I would think that the correct term is "Bachillerato".

A literal translation of Associate's Degree is "Diploma de Associado".

2006-06-29 10:46:57 · answer #3 · answered by buzzfeedbrenny 5 · 1 0

Bachelor degree = Bachillerato -Caribbean
Associate degree = Grado Associado..

In latin america Bachillerato is the high school degree. Bachelor degree is called Grado Universitario.

2006-06-29 10:45:27 · answer #4 · answered by hmc121667 3 · 0 1

This Site Might Help You.

RE:
Ok how do you say Bachelor's Degree in Spanish. I have had so many give me so many different answers. HELP!!!
Someone who actually knows PLEASE!!!!!!!!!!!! How do you say Bachelor's Degree in spanish. How do you say Associate's Degree?

2015-08-16 17:33:41 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Depends on what you want to teach, where you want to teach and what type of position it is (ie unpaid volunteer, or contracted teacher). Example: Volunteer English teachers can usually get away with just a tefl, and some paid English teachers can also. You find these positions typically in poorer countries (I.e. indigenous Peru). Math and science teachers (paid) need a four year BA and/or past experience. These positions are usually found in countries/cities that can afford to employ foreign teachers (ie. Morocco - my AP math teacher got a 2 year contract there ). So really, it just depends on what you want to teach.

2016-03-15 22:46:11 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

First you need to know that degrees in Latin American differ a lot from the US, here, we go to school to get education to get a specific job. In highschool you choose a career of two or three years (two years to get to college earlier, and three to have a title of secretary, management, accounting, or something easy like that), then, in college or university, you usually dont get the "common area" you have in the states, you choose from the beginning what youre mastering at, like Law, Management, Engineering, etc., let me explain how they go, and you choose what you want to say.

When you leave highschool: Titulo a nivel medio. (middle term degree or something like that, thats means you can work as a elementary school teacher, secretary, easy accounting etc.)

In College:
After two or three years of school: Tecnico. (You can study a tecnico in different careers, like Tourism, Management, Chemistry, Human Rights, etc)

When you finish your career in college (after 5 or 6 years): Licenciatura, and you are called a Licenciado (male) or Licenciada (female). Here you can become a Lawyer, an engineer, an architect, or something like that.

After Licenciatura comes Maestria (Master): Usually they last about 2 or three years, they are a specialized area of your career, and example, a Lawyer could take a master in Criminal Law. It is also called magister artium or magister sciantae (not spelled corrected)

After Master comes Doctorado, when you become a Doctor or a PHD as in US, this takes another 4 or more years, and its the highest you can get.

2006-06-30 15:48:58 · answer #7 · answered by Lavender Pink 3 · 5 0

Bachelor degree - bachiller titulo

2006-06-29 10:43:31 · answer #8 · answered by jack russell girl 5 · 0 2

bachelor degree is "licenciatura" or "carrera", the first one it is better. For example, Bachelor degree in engineering is "Licenciatura en ingeniería"

2006-06-29 10:51:04 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 3 0

say carrera......car-air uh
it really means career, but thats how they refer to a 4 year degree

a masters
maestria...mah s tree uh

the two year thing would be like
carrera trunca....car air uh trun-ka....which means like short career

2006-06-29 10:41:40 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

fedest.com, questions and answers