And just to confuse matters further, over here a baccalaureate is another qualification in its own right. What Burns claims to have is a Batchelor of Science degree, abbreviated to BSc.
Indeed. The baccalaureate in England
was to be based on the respected French qualification. Michael Gove wished to introduce the concept as a the standard for 11-18 education, but abandoned it for Progress 8 at 14-16 and retained A-levels at 16-18. Progress 8 is based on the baccalaureate subjects, but it does not follow all the way through to 18 as Mr Gove intended.
The old Grade G-A* system at 14-16 will be phased out with new 1-9 grades. Grade 8 will be broadly equivalent to the current A*, and 9 being A**, dubbed the super GCSE.
In the UK, we have vocational qualifications. There is the BTEC Level 3 for 16-18, which is awarded as a certificate. This is then followed by the Higher National Certificate (HNC) and Higher National Diploma (HND) programmes of study. After receiving an HND, one has a qualifications to be accepted onto a degree course. HNDs are normally based at Foundation Degree level which were once offered by Universities. At my undergrad University, Engineering students who did not quite have the A-level grades to study 1st year BEng were given the option to study a Foundation year. If they completed that Year successfully, they were then transferred to a degree programme for another 3 years.
A student can also receive a Diploma after successfully completing the first year of a Degree Course. I know that my friend failed the second year of his degree, but was awarded a Diploma.
In some cases a Diploma can take 2 years. For instance, in the UK someone can study for a PGCE, which is a Post Graduate Certificate of Education. They'll earn 30 Masters Points if they complete their assignments as Masters Level, otherwise they will be awarded a Professional Graduate Certificate of Education (basically they earn the right to teach but have no masters points).
A student with 30 masters point from a PGCE can study for a further two Years to gains an MA or MSc in Education. After the first year they can cash in their Diploma and then go onto the 2nd Year for a Masters.
It's not clear cut but in general the basic structure follows:
General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSEs, 14-16)
General Certificate of Education (A-levels, 16-18)Vocational Certificate
Vocational DiplomaBachelor Degree
Master Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
Doctor of Letters/Literature/Science
The qualifications in bold, in general, allow entry to a degree course.
Then there are OxBridge degrees such as
jurisprudence, as well as varying medical and surgical qualifications.