(12-09-2023, 12:46 PM)nykorn Wrote: I think the wording above is potentially confusing: It is NOT one single 50 question exam for all courses, or for an unlimited number of degrees. You get one exam per degree, minus the MBA exam which is paired with another degree's at random. I have not seen ENEB refer to the sections within a degree as "courses", they are referred to as sections, including on the transcript. A better wording might be "modules".
This means if you registered for the 3 degrees of MBA, a Master's in HR, and a Master's in Marketing, you will have 2 exams, both of which are 50 questions each. If you register for the MBA and 9 other Master's, you will have 8-9 exams, all of which are 50 questions each. One exam per course, not one exam per section. And as the exam format seems to be relatively new and they have an interest in how their degrees are perceived, I assume they may change this in the future.
In real life terms, while a "one year course" is equal to 40 weeks of study (each uni semester being 20 weeks) at a normal school, some American schools get you the equivalent of 30 ECTS in 8 weeks of study or less, instead of 20. Some schools automatically grant credits based on work history or "proven competency" including portfolios and testing out - someone I know tested out of 10 classes at an American school for Business Administration, and seems to know even less than what I learned from ENEB in some categories (doesn't know anything about international business for example). I personally have taken a 3 hour test (not administered by a university or as part of a class) that, if passed, grants the user the equivalent of 3-4 semesters of college credit (up to 120 ECTS). While I agree the ENEB exam should be more rigorous and there should be less than 2 hours allotted to taking it, if you look at all the other schools in the world... it fits in line with how schools are.
Also keep in mind this is only a one-year Master's, which are apparently only actually intended to teach you the basics to begin with, at any school. Even moreso when you can get in without having a Bachelor's in the field. If you look up 2 year Master's, you'll see a lot of discourse about this.
Semantics bordering on extraneous. Calling them "sections" is nothing more than the chosen vernacular of that area of the world. Here in North America, they're known as courses. Same difference. In the same vein, in North America we call an entire degree offering a program, while in Spain they call a entire degree program a "course". Same difference.
I think most here understand that, so I see no confusion.
Also keep in mind this is only a one-year Master's, which are apparently only actually intended to teach you the basics to begin with, at any school. Even moreso when you can get in without having a Bachelor's in the field. If you look up 2 year Master's, you'll see a lot of discourse about this.
Rationalization. Choice supportive bias. Inaccurate concept. Master's degrees are not designed to teach basics, that is done at the Associate and Bachelor's level. Admission policies are a separate matter. A Master's degree is called a Master's degree for a reason. And even if Master's degrees were generally meant just for basics, a 50 question exam would still not accomplish teaching the basics, so this fails that test as well.
I get why you're trying to rationalize all of this, but personally my ethics would never allow me to defend this. I would be embarrassed to present myself as a holder of a Master's after doing this because I would know I did not put in the work to earn a Master's degree. A proper 1-year Master's is rigorous, this 50 question exam farce is not. To compare them is a mistake of apples and oranges at best, intellectually dishonest at worst.
(12-09-2023, 06:33 PM)RoboPanda Wrote: I received 1 (one) 50 questions exam for writing MBA, Master in Big Data and Master in Digital Marketing.
6 questions repeated themselves. So I successfully proved my master for 3 masters by completing a 46 questions exam
Holy cow. That is just AWFUL. There is no defending that. This is a total diploma mill now. What a disaster, smh.
Yeah, I'm contacting Spain's Ministry of Universities next week. No way they're aware of what's going on.



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