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Sorry, I didn't mean to offend you. I was uncomfortable that you would not listen to me and eternalwind. I gained my Ph.D degree FT in the states. I think so did wind and others replied in this post. Adversely, I feel you are showing us your arrogance by refusing to accept our observation. There are many sorts of arrogant. If I know something and you don't, I might have shown some arrogant, but it definitely can't be Amercian one. I emigrated to Australia in 20s. If I have something not Chinese, it might be something of Aussie. Just kidding. I am doing my second major by PT. (B-School might be slightly different.). I have to be as qualified as a FT student in order to be admitted by the program. Then, I take classes with FT student in the same classroom at same time, do the same homework and projects, and take the same exams. There is no mark on my assignment or exam papers showing that I am PT, and the professors will mark them unbiasedly. As a PT student, I will take 6 credit hrs for fall, but my friend, a FT student, will take 9. At the end, we all have to meet the requirement for a degree. For example, in my case, the reqirement for a M.S. in Math is 30 credit hrs courses and a thesis. You can do it anyway as you like. There is nothing different between FT and PT. However, PT students sacrifice leisure time, but keep their work experience.
[此贴子已经被作者于2006-8-15 8:29:54编辑过] |