10-02-2022, 07:18 PM
(10-02-2022, 05:33 AM)rachel83az Wrote:(10-01-2022, 09:52 PM)uuin Wrote: Greetings evertone:
I would like to ask if there are any friends who apply for a Japanese university with eneb degree. Currently, I have completed all the courses and am waiting for the certificate. Although I really want to go to Europe and America, I don't have enough money.
thank you all.
The ENEB degrees aren't meant to be used to be continue university studies at another university. What kind of Japanese degree are you trying to get? It's possible that you could get an inexpensive European or American degree online (though, perhaps not as cheaply as the ENEB degree).
I know you're aware of this, but I want to point this out for those who might be passing through: the utility roadblock is really a matter in Spain in the sense that a Master propio (the degree students receive if they successfully complete the program) is not designed to be used to enter a Doctoral program or work in the government sector in Spain. Outside of Spain, it's really country-dependent. Drilling down further it can be school-dependent. In the United States, as long as the degree is evaluated as equivalent to the U.S. standard through a foreign credential evaluation, U.S. schools will take them. Some schools will even take them without an evaluation since some do their own in-house evaluations. And some of those schools will accept them for Doctoral entry (I mentioned some a little while back, I can't remember them all at the moment but Apollos was one), so it's really a matter of a student searching for what they need. I don't know what Japan might be like with this, but from a U.S. perspective there are opportunities.
Where a Master propio tends to have issues is with a 1:1 conversion in two ways: 1. It may not be deemed equivalent to a Master's by some evaluators in the U.S. and instead be deemed equivalent to a Bachelor's degree or a graduate diploma or certificate 2. The credit amounts for each class may not be evaluated as a full 3 credits, but even then it's up to each individual school to make a decision on if they'll accept the courses as a whole regardless of that, and as Michael Smith kindly showed us here, there are schools that are familiar with the credit shaving nonsense and will take the courses straight-up as equal to 3 credits.


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