Is it better to choose a master in architecture or you can choose another one like landscape design or interior design when ur bachelor degree is architecture!!?? I need advices am graduating soon and I want to do my master
randomised
Mar 12, 18 7:00 am
Yes is More
Non Sequitur
Mar 12, 18 7:28 am
Probably. Adulting is hard.
Peter Normand
Mar 12, 18 9:47 am
If you want to be an Architect in the US a masters in architecture, if you do not have an accredited bachelors of architecture, would be necessary.
alleycat393
Apr 20, 18 5:15 pm
This may seem banal, but choosing a Masters degree doesn’t just mean picking the subject you want to study. It also means thinking about how you want to study it – and what style you want to learn in. Masters degrees are much more specialised, and as such do not always meet the conventional learning styles you’ll have experienced in your undergraduate degree. Some programmes include more individual projects in place of taught classes. Others involve lots of practical and vocational work ‘off campus’. And some degrees are based entirely on your own independent research work. So it’s essential to choose a subject you’re passionate about and a course which suits your learning style.
I don't know, but with that name you might consider a career in the... 'entertainment' field.
shji
Apr 20, 18 5:50 pm
Why not work before masters? A year of work will make you a totally different person from now. Then you probably have a better idea what you want to do.
Is it better to choose a master in architecture or you can choose another one like landscape design or interior design when ur bachelor degree is architecture!!?? I need advices am graduating soon and I want to do my master
Yes is More
Probably. Adulting is hard.
If you want to be an Architect in the US a masters in architecture, if you do not have an accredited bachelors of architecture, would be necessary.
This may seem banal, but choosing a Masters degree doesn’t just mean picking the subject you want to study. It also means thinking about how you want to study it – and what style you want to learn in. Masters degrees are much more specialised, and as such do not always meet the conventional learning styles you’ll have experienced in your undergraduate degree. Some programmes include more individual projects in place of taught classes. Others involve lots of practical and vocational work ‘off campus’. And some degrees are based entirely on your own independent research work. So it’s essential to choose a subject you’re passionate about and a course which suits your learning style.
https://www.accessmasterstour.com/
I don't know, but with that name you might consider a career in the... 'entertainment' field.
Why not work before masters? A year of work will make you a totally different person from now. Then you probably have a better idea what you want to do.