Talk:Academic degree/Archive 1

Latest comment: 15 years ago by Zoticogrillo in topic academic degrees-J.D.
Archive 1 Archive 2

May June 2003

I'm not that sure about the exact definition of "degree", but I think the paragraph about Germany is wrong. We have the following system at the moment:

Most academic studies will end with the diploma titles or "Dipl.-Something" or "Magister Artium (M.A.)" (and sometimes MSc) given to the graduate. There is a reform nowadays changing this to basic university studies ending with the degree of bachelor (B.A. or B.Sc.), and secondary university studies ending with the degree of master (M.A. or M.Sc. or MBA).

Graduates with a diploma can continue to study for earning a PhD ("Dr. phil." or "Dr. rer. nat." or "Dr. iur." or ...).

The next step in academic carrier for an post-doc is to habilitate ("Dr. habil."). A person who habilitated and works at university is titled Privatdozent ("PD"), a person appointed to a life-time position at university is called professor ("Prof."). So the usual higher level academic at universities bears something like "Prof. Dr." or "Prof. Dr.-Ing." as title, the level just beyond that bears the title of "PD Dr.", and then come diverse post-graduate and assistant positions. Even the class of university professors is splitted further into ordinary professors and professors ordinarius.

This step is also in reform nowadays, resulting in two different ways to become a professor. One is the way as shown above, the other is to apply for a "junior professor" position after graduating with a PhD title, becoming junior professor for some time (6 years? 12 years?), waiting to become appointed as professor without habilitating first.

-- till we *) 13:46 21 May 2003 (UTC)

I do agree, the section about Germany is crap. It tries to combine the general "Diplom" at universities and polys with the "Diplom I / II" only a special (rare) type of university confers. It also mixes in the "Bachelor/Master" degrees, which are similar to the english system, but have not yet been firmly established (they are intended to supersede the old diplom system). Somebody should rewrite the paragraph, describe the classic one-step system of to "Diplom", and underline the difference to the two-step system of Bachelor+Master and mention as well, that Germany is currently changing the one-step system to the two-step system. The last sentence about the Netherlands is crap as well. The Netherlands have already changed from a German-like one-step system to a two-step system. -- Chris
I have changed the paragraph about degree's in Germany. More information on the change to the two-step system can already be found on the page dealing with the Bologna process. -- shabel 193.196.129.2 09:54, 28 March 2006 (UTC)
Maybe it is just me, but when I stumbled across this page, there was no specific info on the Netherlands. Thus I added it "for the common good of everybody". I hope you like it. I described the situation of after 1982 (I think this is what Chris referred to correctly, and 1982 was only the final step in a process started after WWII for obvious reasons), because that is the one that is in power now. After 1982 they aligned it forcefully with Bologna and with strict time limits set as you can see. no more of very limited playing around and all for booking results or leave.
Of course I have written it trying to be as complete as I can and with explanatory references to keep the text as concise but complete as I can. However, if something for you non-Dutchies out there is not clear or I went over it too quick, let me know so I can elaborate. I have to say honestly I do agree strongly with the section on Germany. It looks like a mush and my personal feeling is that Germany is trying desperately to fit its system into where the rest of the world is moving. Like putting a square peg in a round hole, especially since (in my experience) German academics love their titles and would die if they can not display them prominently any more in public. Thus upgrading titles is good, downgrading would be a reason for Prozac. The same thing goes for the comment above. I think that readers would greatly benefit from a no frills objective comparison to Bologna, adding to it what the titles are nationally and what they "are worth" in an international setting. -- Braab

I see that J.D. is listed under doctoral level degrees. It should probably be noted somewhere that, in the United States at least, a J.D. does not entitle the holder to use the style "Doctor". Whereas, by tradition, the other degrees listed on the page (Ph.D., M.D., D.D.) do entitle the holder to be called "Doctor". -- Slathering 05:34 26 Jun 2003 (UTC)

Yes, it is now mentioned that the J.D. degree according to convention does not confer the title of "doctor" and there is a link to J.D. -- 68.194.190.32 15:42, 23 Dec 2003 (UTC)
That is pure poppycock. What convention says it doesn't confer the title of doctor? Sources please. This is supposed to be an encycopedia not a combination of misinformation and old wives tales. -- Tweeker 00:29, 12 February 2006 (UTC)

Major edit of August 11, 2004

I just did some major copyediting on this article.

  • I tried to reduce redundancy and raise the level of the prose a bit (no offense to anyone who's been working on this before me).
  • Changed "quoted" terms to italicized throughout.
  • In the list of "Types of academic degrees":
    • Removed links to individual degrees and directed readers to the articles for each general type; if someone wants to start linking individual degrees again, they should probably try to include all of them (my opinion, anyway).
    • Removed the U.K. distinction between undergraduate & postgraduate Master's degrees and junior & higher Doctorates, and the whole paragraph about U.S. doctorates; I think all this information belongs in the individual articles I've linked to in this item. See Original version of text below.
  • I also fiddled around with the "See also" list:
    • Added some terms.
    • Incorporated the link to "Degrees of Oxford University" since there's now nothing between the list of degrees and the "See also" list for the whole article.
    • Removed link to "Bologna process" since it is linked to prominently in the main text and even has its own paragraph.

Original version of text in parts I removed/reformatted (should be incorporated into Master's degree and Doctorate, if not already there):

The distinction of "higher doctorates" is not very common in the United States. The U.S. Department of Education and the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) recognize numerous doctoral degrees as equivalent in status and do not discriminate betweem them. See: D.A., D.B.A., D.M.A., D.Sc., Ed.D., Ph.D., Th.D, and more at Doctorate.

- dcljr 18:52, 11 Aug 2004 (UTC)

I've seen some people listing "Candidatus of Science, C. Sc." amongst their degrees - what exactly is this? 81.86.243.7 21:05, 2 Jun 2005 (UTC)

This is Soviet degree, higher than M. Sc. that may be or may not be equal to Ph. D. In U.K., C. Sc. is treated like Ph. D. and Soviet Doctor of Science like DSc. --Master Psychologist 10:23, 23 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Scandinavia candidatus/Cand. mag. degrees

Can anyone provide some information in English about the Cand.mag. and other members of the candidatus/a category of degrees used in Norway and Denmark? Reference dk:Cand.mag. and dk:Kandidat. Thanks!! — Preceding unsigned comment added by Dpr (talkcontribs) 22:35, 28 August 2005 (UTC)

Europe 1st?

Can we have some qualification that Europe was the first 'civilisation' to have Universities, by the 12th Century? I'm pretty sure Greeks had equivilents during their Golden Ages, and I was definately under the impression that China and India had centres of academic excellence long before Europeans had got out of bearskins. --JDnCoke 17:27, 3 October 2005 (UTC)


I'm not sure that's what is being said, and certainly not was originally intended. My first inelegant phrase was "Universities started to be set up in Europe in the 12th and 13th century or so." This was amended to "The first universities were founded in Europe in the 12th century and 13th century." - i.e. 'the first European universities were founded in...'

I'm sure we all know what the Greeks and Romans have done for us, but again the original thrust of the article was intended to concentrate on the traceable roots of the types of institutions still in existence today.

Very Euro-centric and dismissive of ancient history, I know, but not intended to re-write global history... Timberline 21:17, 3 October 2005 (UTC)


Al-Azhar claims university status in 988 AD. Not sure if they were giving out hoity-toity parchments at that point.

http://www.alazhar.org/english/about/index.htm — Preceding unsigned comment added by 142.232.48.5 (talk) 17:23, 19 October 2005 (UTC)

Alphabet soup

This article is awful. And can anyone defend the alphabet soup of unexplained abbreviations? Many of these are probably only local or very narrow professional degrees. This article should focus on the general, the common history of academic degrees and major differences between different systems. Everything else should go in more specific articles. (And please spare me the {{sofixit}} template; Wikipedia would need a whole project to fix all the academia-related articles lacking anything resembling balance and perspective.) up◦land 13:21, 26 November 2005 (UTC)

Europe First?

In addition to the issue about Al-Azhar being the oldest university, organized educational institutions were endemic in the classical Islamic world, funded by endowments called waqf. These institutions funded the organized study of law and medicine long before 12th-century Italy. Furthermore it was a common practice in the Islamic educational system for a master teacher to issue a 'sheheda', or testimony to the mastery of a subject, to an advanced student. The word 'sheheda' in Arabic means 'degree' to this day. The 'Europe first' characterization in this article is manifestly false.

For more on this issue of education in the Islamic context, see the work of George Makdisi in "The Rise of Colleges" and "The Rise of Humanism" — Preceding unsigned comment added by 82.201.229.122 (talk) 20:49, 5 December 2005 (UTC)

August 2005

OK...I guess I'm not getting this. Howardjp is continually deleting external references in the name of "spamectomy." I don't get it. If *every* external link is, in Howardjp's book, "spam," then it is impossible to provide external references. Hence, the information herein exists in a bubble. If, however, Howardjp believes that *some* external links are, indeed, acceptable, I'd like to know what objectively measurable criteria he employs and I'll be happy to comply. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Wikiant (talkcontribs) 03:00, 16 August 2005 (UTC)

None of the (now) four links listed here actual references which relate to this article. Sure, they both discuss degrees, but that is it. An article claiming that if you have a bachelors degree raises your median incoming by 10% (or whatever) is not at all relevant. This article provides a history of the concept of academic degrees, gives a list of degrees from several countries and attempts to provide a comparison point among various international standards. None of the links included currently actually address this, therefore they do not belong here and are linkspam. -Howardjp 13:17, 31 August 2005 (UTC)

The article would benefit from a comparison of terminologies employed in Europe and in the US. For example, in the US, there are five generally (though not universally) accepted academic ranks: Instructor (adjunct and/or non-Ph.D.), Assistant Professor (tenure track but not yet Outtenured), Associate Professor (tenured), Professor, and Distinguished Professor (a very rare title reserved for those who are internationally recognized as the top researchers in their fields).

Technically, a Ph.D. below the rank of Professor carries the title "Dr.," while those at the rank of Professor carry the title "Prof." In practice, students tend to refer to those with Ph.D's as "Dr." and those without as "Prof."

To further complicate matters, in many US colleges (some of which are called "universities," but aren't), the various ranks are awarded on the basis of longevity and teaching. In contrast, in US universities (i.e. institutions that grant a significant number of graduate degrees and in which the faculty conduct significant research), one cannot rise above the rank of Assistant Professor without either a Ph.D. or a terminal masters degree.

-- Wikiant 14:14, 22 August 2005 (UTC)


Wikiant - your comments on academic ranks is true for most senior colleges and universities in the US. However, many community colleges in the US also use the four academic ranks so a "professor" at a community college might be someone with only an asssociate or bachelor's degree.

In the US the titles "college" and "university" are used interchangeably. In the US we generally regard a college as focusing on undergraduate education while a university offers both undergraduate and graduate education. And organizationally, a college maybe part of a university e.g., College of Arts and Sciences etc. In the US, Dartmouth College, Boston College and the College of William and Mary are really universities but they chose to retain their traditional names.

Ouside of the US "college" and "university" are defined differently.

TweekerTweeker — Preceding unsigned comment added by Tweeker (talkcontribs) 20:34, 11 February 2006 (UTC)

Merging with double degree

My two cents on merging Academic degree with double degree, I think it is a good idea. It would fit well into the article... just my two cents.

I'm not sure; my feeling at the moment is that it would be better to keep the articles separate. There's enough in the "Double degree" article to warrant its separate existence, and adding it to the current "Acadmic degree" article would overbalance the latter. --Mel Etitis (Μελ Ετητης) 22:15, 13 January 2006 (UTC)
Only if your linkspam gets carried with it. -James Howard (talk/web) 23:33, 13 January 2006 (UTC)
They should be kept separate (1) for consistency with the rest of the entries about college degrees, (2) to keep the size of those articles under control, and (3) to enable future expansion. As for consistency, there are separate articles for associate's and foundation degrees--among others. I see nothing wrong with adding information from "Double degree" so the concept is mentioned here. However, that degree is treated too comprehensively in its article to merge here without losing information. Finally, the current layout allows both entries to be expanded in the future without becoming crowded. --Primetime 23:07, 27 January 2006 (UTC)
I don't think you are understanding. A double degree is not a degree. It is when you received you work toward any two degrees, simultaneously, typically with dual credit and a comprehensive program. As a result, it seems much more sensible to merge it in than leave it hang out there. -James Howard (talk/web) 16:40, 4 February 2006 (UTC)

I'm not sure that I follow this, but it seems to involve the misunderstanding of a double degree that James Howard has shown from the outset. I suspect that it arises because his knowledge is limited to the North American model (in which talk of credit makes sense, for example) while the subject of the article concerns a type of degree originating and making sense primarily in the British model. --Mel Etitis (Μελ Ετητης) 17:02, 4 February 2006 (UTC)

1) All of the examples in your continually readded linkspam conform with my understanding. 2) You don't even provide a British example in your linkspam. These statements, combined with what you posted above lead to one conclusion: I am not the one who is confused here. That said, you can provide a British example (and, so I don't have to smack you down later, post it here, not in your spam list). -James Howard (talk/web) 17:30, 4 February 2006 (UTC)
  1. between ten and twenty editors have pointed out that it's not linkspam; no-one has agreed with you.
  2. Where on Earth do you think that Stirling is? Learn some basic geography before attacking other editors in this way. --Mel Etitis (Μελ Ετητης) 23:23, 11 February 2006 (UTC)
"Where on Earth do you think that Stirling is?" Scotland of course! Stirling is a very beautiful district. Ok, so this discussion needs some levity and cooling down.

Types of Academic Degree

The section is good but to maintain clarity I recommend that bachelors' degrees need to be listed under bachelors; masters's under masters etc. Yes there are some bachelors' degrees in the UK etc. that are postgraduate and some undergraduate - same with masters' degrees, but it still needs to be organized by degree title.

Also, the only degrees I know of between masters' and doctors' degrees are the Specialist (US) and Licentiate (Theology related). CAS, CAGS etc., are postgraduate certificates NOT degrees. The requirements for a CAS/CAGS maybe similar to a Specialist degree, but a certificate is not a degree.

From US Dept of Education website:

"Students at the graduate level may occasionally undertake specialized, short courses of study. Most of these study programs result in the award of a certificate, frequently called a Certificate of Advanced Study (C.A.S.). The C.A.S. is not considered a degree but it does constitute completion of a structured program of study at the graduate level."

http://www.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ous/international/usnei/us/edlite-intermediate-graduate.html

Specialist degrees are most commonly given in the field of Education (Ed.Sp.) but are also given in Arts (Sp.A.) and School Psychology (S.S.P.). — Preceding unsigned comment added by 68.70.68.94 (talk) 16:23, 4 February 2006 (UTC)


If there are no objections, I will edit the section according my statement above. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 68.70.68.94 (talk) 16:37, 4 February 2006 (UTC)

I'm not sure who this was, but user:Tweeker has just edited along these lines. The misunderstanding is that a degree is defined by its title, not by its nature and rôle. A B.Phil. in Oxford, for example, is a Master's degree (graduates can choose whether to graduate with a B.Phil. or an M.Phil. certificate in fact, though no-one chooses the M.Phil. option so far as I'm aware). The reasons for its name are a matter of recent (20th century) history, but essentially, when all the Oxford B.Phils were renamed "M.Phil.", Philosophy chose not to change the name with the others, as the B.Phil. had too prominent a reputation, which they didn't want to risk.
We're surely interested in the facts about the nature of the degrees, not the surface issue of what they're called. I'm reminded of the person who organised his books by the colour of their bindings; lets organise ours by their contents. --Mel Etitis (Μελ Ετητης) 18:01, 12 February 2006 (UTC)
Since degree definitions vary then the only way to resolve this is to list degrees by country. A single list is just too confusing. I greatly admire the British system but the article needs to be clear to all English speaking readers not just those in the UK. The articles on the degree levels (bachelor, master etc) provide the depth, this article should be an overview. Let's divide it up by country and everyone can work on sections and clarify misinformation.
"We're surely interested in the facts about the nature of the degrees, not the surface issue of what they're called." The information on the US JD and EdD degrees which you have reverted is still erroneous.

Tweeker 04:49, 15 February 2006 (UTC)

I agree up to a point; it's important, though, to bring out the shared early history of degrees, and the relationships between different systems. Perhaps we should have a section on themediæval universities, followed by sections on each different major system, followed by an account that tries to draw parallels and make important distinctions.

One problem that I've found, though, is that even within a country, people can take their knowledge of the system as absolute, insisting dogmatically on an over-generalisation. Still, that can be overcome on Talk, I hope. --Mel Etitis (Μελ Ετητης) 21:12, 15 February 2006 (UTC)

I'm impressed, positive changes. Yes I agree that there is shared history up to a point speaking for the US. The oldest institution of higher education in the US is Harvard University which claims 1636 as its founding date. After the colonies rebelled in 1776 even more academic separation.
I suggest that diplomas and certificates be excluded from the article as they are not degrees and it will further confuse readers.
I still find the listing of academic degree titles confusing and bizarre because it tries to merge two different systems - UK and US. "B.Acc." is not a Specialist degree, but it is a postgraduate degree. Just like placing JD together with BCL, Phil - the JD is not a master's degree but all three of them are postgraduate degrees. They need to be separated. Bachelors' degrees are not even the same - in the US it is a standardized four year program but in the UK there are some undergraduate bachelors' degrees (3 years/4 years) and some postgraduate ones.
"One problem that I've found, though, is that even within a country, people can take their knowledge of the system as absolute, insisting dogmatically on an over-generalisation." Agreed and the best way around it is for all of us to quote valid sources and use footnotes. It will benefit Wikipedia.
The article should be clear to every reader especially those who are not familiar with academia.
I'll start work on the US section.
Tweeker 02:21, 19 February 2006 (UTC)

Anyone Out there?

Anyone working on revising this article? Any administrator overseeing this article?

This article contains incorrect information.

"In the U.S., despite its name, the J.D. degree is not a doctoral level degree. It is a first professional degree and does not confer the title of doctor."

Misinformation - the JD degree is a doctoral degree (Juris Doctor) but it is a professional doctorate (same as MD, DDS etc) and not the same as a PhD.

"Also, in the U.S., holders of the EdD (doctor of education) are considered "doctorally prepared" only within the field of education (see, for example, AACSB rules for accreditation)."

Misinformation - an EdD is an earned doctorate and has nothing to do with AACSB. AACSB is a professional body that accredits business and management programs, not Education programs. Never heard of the term "doctorally prepared". — Preceding unsigned comment added by Tweeker (talkcontribs) 19:55, 11 February 2006 (UTC)

You're probably right about the EdD, but i see no evidence of the JD being a doctorate (by the way, the correct term is not that it is a professional doctorate, but rather a "first professional degree," like the MBA, MD, DDS, etc.). The only statement even close to this is that the ABA declares a JD is all that is necessary to teach, but many other professional programs (MBA, MD, DDS, etc., notice it is the same list), also redurce the requirements for teaching below that of a doctorate. -James Howard (talk/web) 20:23, 11 February 2006 (UTC)
The JD stands for "Juris Doctor" or "Doctor of Jurisprudence" and yes it is a first professional degree and in this case it is a professional doctorate. DDS/DMD is a first professional degree and a professional doctorate. I agree that lawyers don't go around calling themselves "Doctor" but the title is used in academic environments.
For years they were only given an LLB degree as is still the case in the in the UK, Canada etc but wanted a doctorate as being equivalent to other professional postgraduate programs.
TweekerTweeker — Preceding unsigned comment added by Tweeker (talkcontribs) 20:44, 11 February 2006 (UTC)
I've never heard the term "professional doctorate" before. To my understanding, a doctoral degree is the highest degree that can be obtained in a field. Therein lies the issue with the JD. The JD is the first law degree one can obtain. The LLM is earned after the JD, and the SJD (which is the terminal degree in law) is earned after the LLM. All of that makes the JD look more like a post-undergraduate but pre-masters level degree. Also, if you go simply by time, a JD requires 2 to 3 years following a bachelors degree -- that's the typical time required to complete a masters level degree, not a doctorate. Wikiant 21:04, 11 February 2006 (UTC)
Some of the law students I have met call the JD a second bachelors, which makes a lot of sense given the prior history of the LLB. The only other degree progression that is similar is the STB -> STL -> STD progression offered by Catholic seminaries. -James Howard (talk/web) 22:13, 11 February 2006 (UTC)
The term "professional doctorate" is used not only in the US but in the UK, Australia and probably other countries. Just do a Google search. It is the highest degree in a profession, but it is not a research doctorate. A U.S. MD, DDS, JD are awarded based on completion of a program of studies, but it doesn't include researching, writing and defending a dissertation/thesis. It is practitioner oriented as you mentioned, not research oriented.
Last I checked, a JD degree required 3 to 4 years to complete not 2-3 years. The LLM is a hangover from the days when the LLB was the professional degree for lawyers. LLMs are offered in specialty areas of the law; Taxation; Media Law; International Law; etc. The SJD degree is a research doctorate, example from UCLA "The Doctor of Juridical Science (S.J.D.) Degree Program is designed for those seeking to pursue careers as teachers and scholars of law. This highly selective program is open only to applicants who possess a distinguished prior academic record in law, show promise of outstanding scholarship, and demonstrate a high potential for completing a scholarly dissertation of required quality." I don't know why they use SJD, they should call it a PhD in Law.
Theology degrees such as - STB, STL, STD are generally from pontifical universities or from seminaries following the pontifical pattern which has Continental influence. In the British and US pattern the degrees would be BTh - MTh - DTh/ThD.
Tweeker 00:31, 12 February 2006 (UTC)


"This article is awful. And can anyone defend the alphabet soup of unexplained abbreviations? Many of these are probably only local or very narrow professional degrees. This article should focus on the general, the common history of academic degrees and major differences between different systems." Not much has changed since this was posted in November 2005. It is still a jumble, but this is an important section for Education.

I understand "double degree" and I agree it should be included under "Academic Degree". But this is a very small issue to focus on when the whole article needs rewriting.

The entries can't favor one country's system over another - Britain and the US are similar but also different. There are even differences between Britain and Commonwealth countries. We can only generalize about degrees in a few limited areas. Differences should be noted e.g., higher doctorates don't exist in the US and many countries, so that discussion should be labeled "UK higher doctorates".

Tweeker 00:42, 12 February 2006 (UTC)

  1. Admins don't oversee articles; that's not our job.
  2. You're right that the artcile needs work (so do many, many articles). The problem is that it's a huge area. My feeling is that this article should be a general introduction, giving a history and links to indivdual articles on the academic degrees of different educational systems.
  3. The idea that even more articles, such as Double degree, should be merged with this one is bewildering, given your main point. We need to move material out, not bring more in. --Mel Etitis (Μελ Ετητης) 09:55, 19 February 2006 (UTC)

Irrelevant text

Hi, I've removed some text that is not relevant to the article. (I can't believe I have to say this.) Tskoge 15:29, 9 March 2006 (UTC)

No, you're blindly reverted the removal of unnecessary spaces, the correction of a wikilink, and the addition of information for editors concerning the adding of citations. You've consistently refused to explain any of this, refusing to respond to my requests on your Talk page, and ignoring one editing block for your behaviour. From other comments on your Talk page, it seems that this arrogant dismissal of other editors is your normal editing style; believe me, it won't get you anywhere. You've now had at least three blocks; hasn't that taught you anything? --Mel Etitis (Μελ Ετητης) 23:04, 9 March 2006 (UTC)
You've stated no reason for why editing information belongs in thetext. Wikipedia already has many pages for editing information. Are you going to add editing information to all of Wikipedia's pages? I wasn't aware I had three blocks. I guess that means I'm doing something right. Tskoge 22:34, 11 March 2006 (UTC)

You have ignored my comments about the actual nature of your revert. Moreover, advice to editors about issues such as criteria for admission in a list, citation methods, etc., are both common and perfectly acceptable in Wikipedia. --Mel Etitis (Μελ Ετητης) 23:33, 11 March 2006 (UTC)

Academic degrees-JD

I would like to point out that neither the MD or the DDS is the final degree available in either field. Both fields have post professional doctorate master's and PhDs available. A dentist who specializes in orthodontics or oral surgery will typically earn a post DDS master's degree in such a specialty. Even though the MD and DDS do not require a prior master's degree, I do not hear anyone contending that they are not doctorates. Further, I do not hear anyone contending that a PharmD is not a doctorate even though it can be earned with six total years of education and no prior bachelor's degree. The same is true for a DC (doctor of chiropractic medicine). A JD nominally reuires more than six years of education and deserves the same status and respect as other professional doctorates. Simply because it is not common for attorneys to use the title of Dr. does not mean they are not Drs. The argument that a degree which states it confers the degree and title of Doctor of Law (as does a law degree from the University of Wisconsin among others) is nonsense. There is simply no logical argument that a degree which confers the title of doctor is not a doctorate. Similarly, there is no logical argument that one holding a doctorate cannot use the title Dr. Drdouma 15:28, 30 March 2006 (UTC)

J.D.

There is absolutely no logical reason or authority to treat a J.D. differently than any other professional doctorate. It simply does not belong grouped with master's degrees. Comparing academic doctorates and professional doctorates is like comparing apples to oranges. As to the MSW to DSW argument, there is no comparison to a JD. An MSW is a professional master's degree, a JD is a professional doctorate. Among other degrees, I hold both a JD and an MSW. There is no comparison in level of study or time involved. If one is going to treat one professional doctorate as somehow equating to a master's degree, one must logically do so for all professional doctorates which do not require a prerequisite master's degree (DDS, PharmD, MD, DO, OD, DC, DPM, etc.). Drdouma 20:06, 30 March 2006 (UTC)

Your logic is faulty. It is not the case that we must treat all doctorates as equivalent. Indeed, many countries have a concept of lower and higher doctorates; the J.D. and J.S.D. somewhat fit that mold, making the J.D. a lower doctorate (though I still think the J.S.D. isn't fully relevant here). The old D.Pharm. could be taken without a bachelor's or master's degree, but was always treated as equivalent to a master's degree. It was a six-year professional program. How can you equate the J.D., requiring a bachelor's (for all practical purposes) plus three years, with no original research or postgraduate training required (but an exam), to a M.D., requiring a bachelor's plus four years plus an additional three or more years of residency (and exams) in order to be licensed? In addition, for better or worse, the term doctor is pretty well attached to the practice of medicine/dentistry/podiatry/chiropractic/veterinary medicine/etc., and it is tilting at windmills to hope to change that. In countries where a bachelor's degree takes the place of our M.D., there is a form people fill out to gain the right to use the 'courtesy title' of Doctor. Look at the ongoing change to a three year [1] program in physical therapy. Will you tell me that that too is equivalent to a medical school education? Look at USC's PPDPT program [2]. It requires 30 credits (including a case study) to 'convert' your MPT to a new-and-improved DPT. (Didn't law schools do something like this for LL.B.'s in the early 70s?) What about Psy.D. and Au.D. (audiology) programs? Just because some group decides that they too should be doctors because what they do is so important/difficult/honorable, doesn't make it so. What if I started offering a one-year Doctor of Editing degree for Wikipedians? Would that make them equivalent to other types of doctors? JJL 21:25, 30 March 2006 (UTC)

J.D.

You simply cannot state that there is a controversy as to whether an accredited degree from an accredited institution of higher education which states that the holder of the degree is granted the "degree and title of Doctor of Jurisprudence" is a doctorate degree. Obviously, a degree which grants the title Doctor is a doctorate degree. Without authority to the contrary, you cannot say that it is not. If you do not like the fact that the accrediting bodies and degree granting institutions are granting this degree, perhaps you should take it up with them. However, to simply state that there is a contoversy as to whether a named doctorate is a doctorate without some authority is a blatantly false statement. Such a statement could subject Wikipedia to a defamation suit. "Freedom of Speech" does not protect knowingly false statements which are made with malice. Malice appears to be implied in your denegration of the J.D. since you single out no other prfessional doctorate even though there are listed doctorates such as the PharmD which require less education than the J.D. As to whether holders of the J.D. can use the title Dr., you again cite no authority for your alleged controversy. ABA informal ethics opinion 1151 states that attorneys holding a J.D. can use the title Doctor. Likewise, state bar associations hold that attorneys holding a J.D. can use the title Doctor. See for example, State Bar of Michigan ethics opinion CI-1176. Without some authority to the contrary, you cannot legally state a controversy exists anywhere but in your own mind. To do so, will again potentially subject Wikipedia to a defamation suit. Drdouma 14:12, 3 April 2006 (UTC)

Wow. JJL 14:54, 3 April 2006 (UTC)

J.D.

This article is supposed to be about facts, not opinion. The facts are: The J.D. degree is accredited by the ABA. The degree itself says it is a doctorate. The ABA says the holder of the degree can use the title doctor.

If anyone is going to say there is a controversy regarding whether the degree is a doctorate and/or whether the holder of a J.D. can use the title doctor, they need facts to support such statements. Drdouma 13:41, 4 April 2006 (UTC)

Here's just a short list of comments from a quick googling. I found many discussions on web boards that clearly indicated that yes, there is a controversy over this issue. One such discussion was occurring on a pharmacy board, where the same issue was being debated concerning pharmacists! Clearly, there is indeed no agreement as to whether U.S. J.D. holders can/should use the title 'Doctor'. I've also included a few links from other countries for comparison. From Australia: "Please note that the despite the name, the JD is not a doctoral-level award and graduates are not entitled to use the honorific title "Doctor"." [3], [4], [5] From a U.S. law firm: "the practice of some attorneys of using the title "Doctor." Although there is apparently some dispute over this," [6] From Hong Kong: "Although the award has the word 'Doctor' in its title, this is a traditional usage and it is not generally regarded as equivalent to the PhD degree or other doctoral awards. It is a first law degree for students who are already graduates in a non-law discipline." [7] Also from HK: "The JD is not academically equivalent to a research doctoral degree, and is formally classified as a taught master’s degree programme." (oops, lost the link--CUHK) Interesting (!) link: "Worldwide within the legal profession, all pracitising attorneys are called "Mr." or "Ms./Mrs./Ms./Miss," regardless of whether they possess a doctoral degree or not. This is a convention of the courts, of litigation and of the legal profession generally" [8] Unsourced claim: "New Jersey actually has an ethics opinion on attorneys using the term "Doctor". The only way it is permissible is if an attorney is teaching in an institution where professors with doctorates use the term "doctor"." [9] Lawyer's blog commentary (comments going both ways on this): "A JD does not carry the right to the title doctor, regardless the nominal meaning of the letters." [10] Lawyers on a web board: "But after X years of sweat, lawyers have no real titles. "Counselor" often is used edgily. We can't use "Dr.," since a JD isn't a doctorate or MD." "generally it is considered inappropriate for an Attorney at Law to go by "doctor" because they are typically advocating only one side of a position." [11] Answers.com: "The title of Doctor is used both by and of those holding research doctorates or some professional (usually medical) degrees[...]In the United States, with the exception of the Juris Doctor degree (law), professional doctoral degrees are terminal degrees" [12], "The title doctor is generally considered inappropriate to describe someone who holds a Juris Doctor degree" [13] A FAQs site acknowledges the controversy: "However, the debate will most likely continue since most law school graduates will enter the legal profession and won't have to contend with how others view the "doctoral" status of their degree." [14] JJL 15:15, 4 April 2006 (UTC)
Would Drdouma please stop calling the text in question "defamatory" in his or edit summaries? This is absurd, even if he or she is right about the facts (something that hasn't been settled). --Mel Etitis (Μελ Ετητης) 15:54, 4 April 2006 (UTC)

In the 900-year history of academic degrees, how significant is one particular name for an American law degree used during the last few decades? Does the controversy over the American J.D. degree, or even the degree itself, have to be mentioned in this particular article at all? up◦land 16:58, 4 April 2006 (UTC)

Fair point. It might suffice to note it at the J.D. entry, though I think that noting it here in the footnote form is also reasonable--esp. since it appears in a list of doctoral degrees. Should the same logic be applied to the BCL and BPhil, if the note is removed from the J.D.? JJL 18:51, 4 April 2006 (UTC)
I would like to see a complete rewrite of this and most other high-level articles on "academia"-related topics. It should provide a historical overview covering the main academic degrees developing in the Middle Ages and the various degree systems deriving from them, and how these relate to each other (all obviously based on sound references rather than personal experience), and leave all the details of individual degrees in different contemporary educational systems to more specific lower-level articles. At this point, I see very little salvageable material in this article, but I don't feel up to rewriting it on my own either. up◦land 13:22, 5 April 2006 (UTC)

JD

The prior editor utilizes both fault facts and faulty logic. A PharmD continues to require only six years of education with no prerequisite bachelor's or master's degree. If he considers the PharmD to be equivilent to a master's degree, why does he not include the PharmD in the master's category with a footnote similar to the one he includes with the JD. The fact of the matter is, the PharmD is a professional doctorate and holders of the degree use the title Dr. As to the discussion about the MD, a residency has nothing to do with earning the degree. A residency is for the purpose of specialization and/or licensing. The holder of an MD is not rquired to take a residency or become a licensed physician. Even so, such an individual has a professional doctorate and may use the title Dr. The issue is not whether one doctorate is more difficult in time or effort to obtain. This is highly subjective. I know individuals holding PhDs who attended law school and dropped out because it was "too difficult". I also know individuals holding both a PhD and a JD who state the JD was the more difficult degree to earn. Again, apples and oranges are being mixed. The AuD and DPT are purely professional doctorates. The PsyD is essentially a research doctorate which is the equivilent to a PhD in psychology. The fact of the matter is, the JD is an accredited professional doctorate. Other than in the mind of certain apparently prejudiced individuals, it is consistently recognized as a professional doctorate. Those stating otherwise have presented not authority for their absurd position. Even though it is not common for holders of the JD to do so, the accrediting bodies and state regulatory bodies have recognized the right of such individuals to use the title Dr. There is simply no legitimate controversy as to whether or not the JD is an accredited professional doctorate. The only controversy that exist is that some individuals apparently do not like that fact. Finally, while one could start offering a one year doctorate in editing, such a doctorate would not receive accredidation from any legitimate body. As such, it would be illegal in many states for the holder of such a degree to use the title Dr. Drdouma 15:39, 31 March 2006 (UTC)

In your most recent edit, you make a statement about the Pharm.D. being basically an M.S. as a simple matter of fact, but use "there are those..." language for the J.D. While I agree that the new and improved Pharm.D. is still just a M.S.-level degree, the pharmacists adamantly disagree. I believe pharmacists now enter the service as O-3s (Captain in the Army), like M.D.s and dentists and other doctorate holders, rather than as O-2s (1LT in the army) like nurses and lawyers, who are not doctorally prepared. I think a better case can be made for the Pharm.D. than the J.D., and there is surely as much discussion of it (e.g., at [15]). JJL 14:21, 5 April 2006 (UTC)

PharmD

Posted on my User Tak page, and repeated here for reference (JJL 01:52, 18 July 2006 (UTC)):

Dear JJL - I noted that you reinserted the footnote (e.g. I restored the DPharm footnote. About half of the students do the whole program in 5 years--18 year olds just out of H.S. JJL 00:30, 17 July 2006 (UTC)).
I deleted the footnote again and would ask that it remain deleted. As a holder of the PharmD degree (as well as a BS in Pharmacy, an MS and in the next month an MBA - 11 years in total), the footnote is materially incorrect and misleading.
The degree is the degree (a professional doctorate in pharmacy inclusive of the title that goes along with it) - it is not "like" other degrees just as a DBA is not like an EdD or perhaps a PhD in physics is not like a PhD in history.
Not unlike medical or dental school, the professional curriculum that leads to the granting of the degree is four years in duration (e.g. the course work that leads to the degree in each of these professions starts in professional year 1, day 1, course 1 and ends on the last day of year 4). In the summers between professional years, pharmacy students serve as interns as one of the requirements to sit for State licensing examinations; thereby, generally making the program a year around effort.
In the case of pharmacy, all Universities offering the degree in the US need to be accredited by the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education and all students are required to have completed their prerequisite courses (generally 2 years in duration (calculus, chemistry, biology, physics, English, etc) but many applicants now have undergraduate or graduate degrees) before starting the professional program.
Pharmacy graduates also have the option to pursue post graduate residencies and fellowships.
I think that the ongoing debate within the editing group is missing the forest when trying to equate "time served" across degrees. Each degree is unique within its profession.
I cannot agree. Look at U. of S. Nevada, which is still pushing a 5-year program (60 undergrad. hours plus a 3 year D.Pharm.), thus graduating 23 year old "doctors" on a regular basis. Shenandoah U. claims a 6 year program, but I know many do it in 5 years, and that about half the students there are on a 5- or 6-year schedule [16]. The DPharm is still, in effect, a master's degree level program. However, I do think this is better deabted at the original article's Talk page. JJL 01:52, 18 July 2006 (UTC)

--

Since I re-posted this here, an interesting article appeared in The Chronicle of Higher Education ("A Clinical Look at Clinical Doctorates," William L. Siler and Diane Smith Randolph, 21 July 2006, pg.B12). It questions the DPharm degree's level and value. "Universities complain about clinical doctorates, arguing that degrees like doctor of pharmacy represent little more than degree creep and are not equivalent to, say, the Ph.D. or M.D." Interesting reading in this regard. The authors are, resp., professors of physical and occupational therapy, and I assume they write in response to the new D.P.T.. JJL 03:11, 21 July 2006 (UTC)


SJD

The SJD or JSD, referred to by many schools as Doctor of Judicial Science, is not the highest degree in the field of law. In fact the degree has nothing to do with the practice of law. It is a trully academic degree for those wishing to pursue academics. Even though a J.D. is a prerequisite, earning an SJD is not a normal progression in the field of law as Mel Etitis implies. The JD is the highest professional doctorate in the field of law. Just as a Physician or dentist who wishes to specialize may earn a master's degree after the professional doctorate, an attorney who wishes to specialize may earn a master's degree. There is simply no true professional doctorate in the U.S. that requires a master's degree prior to the professional doctorate. If Mel Etitis wishes to equate the J.D. to something less than a doctorate degree, he should treat the MD, DDS, PharmD, etc. in a similar manner. To do otherwise is not logical and blatantly discriminatory. Drdouma 18:52, 30 March 2006 (UTC)

The JSD is indeed more akin to a Ph.D., and is not a professional degree. It is intended for would-be academics and doesn't really relate to one's qualifications to practice law. It's analogous to the relationship between a M.Arch. and the D.Arch. or similar higher degree, or the M.S.W. and the D.S.W. or other higher degree. The master's degree is the qualification for practice, and the doctorate is for academics/researchers. As to the training of physicians, note that they refer to medical studies as undergraduate medical education, and residency as postgraduate medical education. I think the JSD is something of a red herring here. It's the J.D. that should be focused on. In my experience, most academics do not consider it comparable to a Ph.D. or M.D.; it's considered a roughly professional master's level degree. By the way, do we need so many different headings here? And, I do agree that taking it to the talk page for the J.D. entry makes sense. JJL 19:29, 30 March 2006 (UTC)

Quote: "There is simply no true professional doctorate in the U.S. that requires a master's degree prior to the professional doctorate." Ministry for instance, requires and MDiv before a DMin. I believe it counts as a professional degree. Technically Ed.D in some schools is considered a professional degree since more schools are offering Ph.Ds in education along side their Ed.D. 70.177.68.209 20:38, 27 July 2006 (UTC)

DMin

Doctor of Ministry is missing from the navigation template at the bottom of the page. If it's not a notable degree, then perhaps MDiv should also be removed? 70.177.68.209 20:23, 27 July 2006 (UTC)

No, the MDiv should most certainly not be removed from the template. Or were you inversely proposing that the DMin be added to the template? By all appearances, the Dmin is a less notable (rather, common) degree, and as such, I think the Dmin can probably remain excluded. --jmv 20:52, 30 July 2006 (UTC)

Ahhh, much better

Dear fellow editors: Sorry it's taken a while for me to get back to you. I see the footnote causing the contention was edited to read as follows by JJL at 15:34 on 30 March 2006:

In the U.S., there is not universal agreement as to whether the J.D. degree is to be considered a doctoral level degree, and whether holders of it are entitled to use the title "doctor". See the Comparison with other degrees section [. . . etc]

In my opinion, this footnote is a vast improvement. I see there were a few more edits after that, but it appears to remain in the article, at least as of the time of this comment. I would argue that JJL's language is a great solution. Although there is still no citation to authority (pro or con on the position of whether a J.D. is "really" a doctorate) it takes no position one way or the other -- I think at least here you don't need to cite to a source. In my opinion, very good arguments were presented by all involved. My hat is off to fellow editors Mel Etitis, Drdouma, JJL, and Wikiant (I hope I didn't leave anyone out). Yours, Famspear 04:27, 1 April 2006 (UTC)

PS: As of this comment, the most recent edit is the one by Mel Etitis at 15:16 on 31 March 2006. Yours, Famspear 04:30, 1 April 2006 (UTC)
Much improved, kudos to those who have worked on it. I still cringe however when I see the chart of Academic Degrees. Trying to mix US and British degrees doesn't work, they aren't equivalent. It would be much better to have two charts, British Academic Degrees and American Academic Degrees. As to the JD controversy (I hate to bring it up because this is a very angry group), but the degree exists and an encyclopedia deals with facts not opinions. For this degree the ABA and the US Dept of Education are objective sources. [17]
--Highdesert 04:33, 5 August 2006 (UTC)

EdD / PhD / LLD

Historically, there were ONLY professional doctorates, because the social interpretation of degrees was very different to the modern one. The professional doctorates of DD, DLitt, LLD, JD, MD, DSc, and DEng were joined in Victorian times by the American idea of a professional "half-doctorate" in the specialism of Research. Nowadays we might call it D.Res. but at the time they poetically called it D.Phil. or Ph.D. My colleagues at this university (Hull, UK) seem to be agreed that the standard for the PhD has risen since then until it is as high as that of the full doctorates ever was, and the older doctorates have become little more than a way of advertising yourself for advancement to a chair (full professorship), or as honorary degrees.

Until 1954, only Doctors of Laws (LLD) were qualified to practise as advocates (sic) in the Court of Chivalry of England (sic). This was a historical hang-over that had been overlooked by Victorian reformers. In the middle ages, there was an Inns of Court called Doctors Commons where they were based.

So there arose a need for something to replace the unattainable professional doctorate standards. This was done by introducing "half-doctorates" with variations on the names of the now so-called "higher doctorates" - EngD for DEng, EdD for DEd, DJur for JD, and so on.

Recently the University of London announced that it would no longer be awarding higher doctorates.

Meanwhile, in Britain, the distinction between the (now) first, or lower, doctorates, and the higher doctorates is asserted by using a difference in academic costume. For example, at Cambridge University, a higher doctor wears a scarlet robe, and a first doctor wears a black robe with scarlet facings. At Southampton University, a higher doctor wears a scarlet robe and a first doctor wears a claret robe. Other universities show the difference by changing the shape of the sleeves or the amount or colour of silk trimmings.

OrangUtanUK - 1.June.2006 at 11:07 UTC

YorkU versus York

Confusion results from ... the use of 'York' instead of 'YorkU' by graduates of York University in Canada.

This statement is plain stupid.

'YorkU' is not a valid name for a degree from York University in Canada. To disambiguate from York University in the U.K., titles of degrees conferred from both universities include the name of the country. E.g. "York (U.K.)" and "York (Can.)". This is the de facto standard, and can be seen in countless academic curriculum vitae.

'YorkU' comes from the Canadian university's recent re-branding campaign. The domain name is "yorku.ca" and, from this, marketers decided to eastablish the name "YorkU" as associated with York University in the minds of Canadian students and philanthropists. I know it's really lame-ass, but this sort of thing is pretty common amongst North American universities these days. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 198.96.34.62 (talk) 13:34, 17 August 2006 (UTC)

Degree Levels and Degree Titles

The JD may or may not be a doctorate, but I don't think the wording of the diploma provides definitive evidence either way. After all, there are quite a few degrees for which the actual degree level does not correspond to the name of the degree: the Cambridge MA (which represents no academic work past the bachelor's level), the Scottish MA (which is a bachelor's-level degree), the Oxford BPhil (which is a master's-level degree), the British higher doctorates (which represent a level of accomplishment well beyond the usual doctoral level), the Italian Laurea (which confers a doctoral title despite the fact that it is awarded three years after the completion of high school), and the various honorary doctorates (which are usually not academic credentials in any sense).

I also don't see how the way the degree-holder is addressed determines the level of the degree. The Bachelor of Medicine is unquestionably an undergraduate degree, but those with the degree (except for surgeons and a few others) are invariably addressed as "Doctor."

I'm not arguing that the JD isn't a doctorate, but those who say "the name of the degree represents the level of the degree" must necessarily find some way of explaining the MANY exceptions to that general rule.

Hi, I lately heard a title confering session in Italy and students of the three years course were proclamated "laureati" while students of five years course were proclamated "dottori" so I'm not sure the actual three years Laurea confers a doctoral title. --81.208.83.221 21:10, 1 November 2006 (UTC)

EdD

I don't normally edit this page, so I'll drop this comment and let you all decide what to do with this.

The second footnote states that "In the U.S., holders of the EdD (Doctor of Education) are considered "doctorally prepared" only within the field of education," although the article for Doctor of Education makes no mention of this fact and the two external links offered link only to front pages of organizations and not to any specific rule or explanation. In fact, going by what the EdD article states, the EdD is substantially equivalent to a PhD in the United States. Hopefully someone can clear this up, because this footnote makes no sense by itself. -- Thesquire (talk - contribs) 06:34, 30 May 2006 (UTC)

Conventional wisdom among professors in American universities is that the EdD is *not* equivalent to a PhD in large part because the EdD is more akin to a professional degree rather than a research degree. Penn State College of Education says, "The career goal of one pursuing an Ed.D. should be the professional practice of educational administration. The career goal of one pursuing a Ph.D. should be research and scholarly work." For more, see http://www.usc.edu/dept/chepa/pdf/ASHE_townsend.pdf Wikiant 11:35, 30 May 2006 (UTC)
Other EdD programs follow the scholar/practioner model, which simply shift some of the emphasis from research to practice, although it is still a research degree.
I agree Thesquire, that footnote makes no sense at all. And the link is to an accreditation body that accredits business schools - that has nothing to do with an EdD degree. Yes, the EdD degree is becoming more practitioner oriented like the PsyD degree, but they are not in the category of a First Professional Degree like the MD or JD. EdD and PsyD degree candidates must still write and defend a dissertation like PhD candidates - MD, JD etc candidates do not.--Highdesert 04:08, 5 August 2006 (UTC)
The footnote is incorrect as in addition to other disciplines, there are EdD programs in Psychology which meet the doctoral requirement for licensure and practice of psychology in the U.S.
See also the discussion here at the Doctor_of_Education Talk page. Research requirements for the Ed.D. are in general less tahn those for the Ph.D., and the degree is increasingly viewed as a professional degree. JJL 17:10, 5 November 2006 (UTC)

Dec 21 edits

I've twice now revert this rant [18]. This is WP:POV and WP:OR. Please don't add it again. Not a dog 04:02, 22 December 2006 (UTC)


Is this supposed to mean something?

In the note in the middle of "Types of academic degrees" I find this:

Kandidat Nauk Candidate of Science Doktor Nauk Doctor of Science

It's meaning doesn't really jump out at me.... SimonLyall 11:33, 12 July 2005 (UTC)

It's two examples of transliterated Russian, with the translations by the side. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 212.183.134.66 (talk) 12:02, 27 December 2006 (UTC)

Proposal to merge with Professional degree

A proposal to merge with Professional degree was made in August 2006. No comments at all were received. I've removed the tag and not moved forward with the proposal. Cheers! Wassupwestcoast 23:48, 10 February 2007 (UTC)

Australian diploma not a degree?

I'm a little uncomfortable with this statement on the main page: at best it's pedantic, at worst it's POV.

In some countries, such as Australia, a diploma is a specific academic award that is sometimes incorrectly considered to be an academic degree. The distinction is that the diploma is a physical document awarded, while a degree is a status to which a person is admitted. Diplomas are usually signified by a stole rather than an academic hood, the latter being used only for those of graduate status.

The Australian qualifications framework has a number of historical anomalies due to the fact that until relatively recently, health science courses (in particular) were conducted in separate institutions that were not aligned with universities, and so were forbidden to issue "Bachelor" degrees in their own right. As a result, these 3 year full time courses (the equivalent of a university BA or BSc) were invariably described as "Diploma of Applied Science (Discipline)". Whilst I respect a traditionfrom an environment where diploma might be an synonym of testamur or "parchment", I think it should be possible, when considering an Australian context, to acknowledge this anomaly.

Happy to discuss in a civilised manner as to why I could (or should) be mistaken and so obtain enlightenment. Adamm 09:31, 3 April 2007 (UTC)


Doctorates backed by the Government

It is interesting to note that the Juris Doctor or Medical Doctor Degrees enable you to be Licensed, approved, sanctioned, and recognized by the state and sometimes federal government. Example: A qualified Juris Doctor Degree holder can take the state exam if eligible and become licensed as an Attorney, Lawyer, or Counselor by the respective state in the USA. Thus, Voila, some USA doctor degrees are backed by a government license and recognition. Therefore, a medical or juris doctor can have a real post-graduate degree or doctorate degree and achieve a license from the State Supreme Courts or Federal Government (i.e. Federal Courts) or Board of Medical Examiners & DEA (medical doctors) to engage in specific government privileges and activities. The bad news (in the USA) is that a PhD in Political Science, Criminal Justice or even a PhD International Law most probably is not eligible for a government license to practice law in any jurisdiction. This is probably why so many people now go for a combined degree: i.e. JD/PHD or MD/PHD so that they can be a easy fit in academia and be recognized by the government.

  • As a note, the AACSB and ACBSP (the most recognized USA Business Accredation forces recognized by the USA Dept. of Education) make special recognition of the: Juris Doctor degree for qualified professors and faculty to teach: Business Law, CPA Track Courses, Tax Law Courses, Financial Planning (Estates and Retirement Law), Law and Ethics, Legal Environment etc. Therefore, the JD degree is well needed at that 2500 plus USA business school programs. However, it is more fashionable for business schools to hire a JD with an accredited MBA or Masters Degree for teaching purposes.

Globalprofessor 14:39, 3 May 2007 (UTC)globalprofessorGlobalprofessor 14:39, 3 May 2007 (UTC)

Consistancy with academic degrees template

I just spent some time updating this page with information from the Academic Degrees template - apparently stuff gets added to that but not here. Is there perhaps an automated way of linking the list of academic degrees with the template? They contain almost exactly the same information.

I did not yet sort out the Doctorate degrees into the catagories of First-Professional Degrees and Doctorate as conferred by the degrees template, so that is still up for grabs.

Additionally, there needs to be some consistant style in regards to period use in degree titles. This page, the template, and each individual degree page should use the same format (e.g. B.A. or BA). Even on a single page it is mixed. --Ec- 06:06, 30 August 2006 (UTC)

Thank you Ec for trying to sort out the mess in the Academic Degree chart. It's better, but the only way to really fix it is to make two or more charts based on each country. The US and the UK may use the same degree titles, but they do not mean the same thing. As Wikipedia is an encyclopedia for general use, information should be very clear to readers who are novices on various topics.
The chart implies that there there is a hierarchy or ladder in the degrees listed and one could assume that a Foundation degree is below an Associate degree. We know that one isn't superior to the other because they are based on two separate national systems, but to a novice on this subject it would not be that clear. Again one could assume that all bachelors degrees or all masters degrees are equal which they are not. My understanding of the UK system (and I am not an expert) is that their bachelors degrees are generally 3 years in length, while it takes 4 years in the US. The M.Sci. degree in the UK is an undegraduate degree and the LL.B. is a postgraduate degree. In the US a masters degree is always postgraduate and the LL.B. has been replaced by the J.D.. My recommendation is to separate US and UK degrees into two charts. Also, I'd invert the chart and somehow show undergraduate and graduate/postgraduate levels.
There are other academic awards that thankfully no one has tried to add to this mix i.e., undergraduate and postgraduate certificates and diplomas. The CAS listed in the Specialist section is not a degree but a post masters award. Similar awards are CAGS, PMC, AC etc.--Highdesert 00:17, 10 September 2006 (UTC)
Agreed, that would be the ideal solution. I, regrettably, do not have enough wikipedia experience for this type of thing, nor do I know enough about the material to even try. Hopefully someone will take up the job.Ec- 03:19, 11 September 2006 (UTC)

Has this proposal been discussed before? I think that's a great idea. ALTON .ıl 05:42, 4 May 2007 (UTC)

Criticism

this needs a criticism section especially for the USA. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 65.100.160.212 (talk) 01:18, 17 September 2007 (UTC)

PhD and "faculties"

The section describing the PhD, DD, and MD as early faculties needs to be amended. The PhD is a 19th century German innovation. The Faculty of Arts had no higher degrees than MA, although it did become common to award DLitt or LLD by the 18th century. What say you? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Grkndeacon (talkcontribs) 15:26, 29 February 2008 (UTC)

Length of PhD studies in the UK

I take issue with the statement that one can finish a research doctorate in the UK in six years only counting from the initial day of the undergraduate bachelor's degree course. In the fields of arts, humanities and social sciences, the standard offer for admission as a PhD student normally requires that the applicant complete a one-year taught master's degree in addition to a 3-year bachelor's degree before he/she can begin PhD-level research. In engineering and natural sciences on the other hand, the standard offer for admission normally requires that the student hold a 4-year undergraduate master's degree (e.g., an MEng, MSci or equivalent). Students who don't have a master's may be admitted, but Oxbridge for example admits them as "probationary research students" (PRS), who will have to take taught master's classes anyway and take at least one year to have their doctoral registration status confirmed. Furthermore, even though the ideal timeline to submit a doctoral thesis is 3 years, most UK PhD students take at least one additional academic term (for final thesis write-up, Viva examinations, and corrections) before they can actually graduate,

I'd say that the standard time to get a PhD in a top UK university is probably closer to seven and a half to eight years (3 years undergrad + 1-year master + 3-4 years for the PhD properly). That is still shorter than in the US though (where the timetable is typically 4 years undergrad + 2-year master's+ 3-5 years for the PhD properly). 201.6.131.3 (talk) 17:48, 10 May 2008 (UTC)

academic degrees-J.D.

If a J.D. is not a doctorate, can anyone explain why J.D. graduates wear doctoral robes at graduation?

  1. Please sign your comments.
  2. That doesn't constitute an argument. This is being discussed sensibly at Talk:Juris Doctor. If you want to continue with the discussion, please do so there. --Mel Etitis (Μελ Ετητης) 18:04, 30 March 2006 (UTC)

This matter has been settled with authoritative research in the current J.D. article. Zoticogrillo (talk) 23:04, 4 June 2008 (UTC)