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Associate's degree

An associate's degree is the degree awarded by community colleges in Canada and the United States upon completion of a course of study equivalent to the first two years in a four-year college or university. It is the lowest in the hierarchy of academic degrees offered by Canada and the US. Common abbreviations are A.A. (Associate of Arts) and A.S. (Associate of Science). It is also equivalent to the UK's foundation degree. In 2000, Hong Kong introduced associate's degrees, as an equivalence to higher diploma s. These programmes are provided through affliated colleges at universities. In 2004, it was decided by the Federal and State governments of Australia to introduce two-year associate degrees into that country, based on the American model -- previously, only one to two-year diplomas and three-year bachelor's degrees existed in Australia.

Contents

Associate's Degree

Generalized categories or types of Associate's Degrees

It is possible to break the Associate's Degree into three general categories.

An Associate of Arts degree is often awarded for programs that are terminal or intended for transfer to a four year college, usually with a major in the social sciences or humanities. It is also awarded to General Studies students, those who decline to select an area of concentration.

The Associate of Science degree is similarly awarded to terminal students or to potential transferees to a four years college, but the areas of concentration is ususally in mathematics, natural sciences, or technology.

The Associate of Applied Science degree is awarded to students who are permitted to relax some of the general education requirements in order to study more course work in their program area. Typically, this kind of degree is for student who intends to enter the work force upon graduation.

Time requirements

The associate degree is most often awarded to students completing postsecondary programs requiring at least one but no more than two years of full-time study. More often, a lesser diploma, called a Certificate, is awarded for only a one year program. It is not unusual for students to study more than two years to complete the requirements for an associate's degree.

Names of Associate's Degrees

Wittstruck (1975) notes that the associate degree goes by several different names:

--Associate of/in Technical Studies --Associate in General Education --Associate of/in General Studies --Associate of Individualized Study --Associate of Applied (name of specialty) --Associate of/in Applied Science --Associate of/in Applied Arts --Associate in Technical Arts --Associate of/in Technology --Associate of/in (name of specialty) --Associate of/in Occupational Studies --Associate of/in Science --Associate of/in Arts --Associate of Arts and Sciences --Associate in Specialized Business --Associate in Specialized Technology --Associate in Nursing --Associate of Science in Nursing

Data on associate degrees are frequently disaggregated by curriculum: vocational or nonvocational. The Higher Education General Information Survey (HEGIS) counts nonvocational degrees under the category "Arts and Sciences or General Programs"; vocational degrees are counted under six headings:

--Data Processing Technologies --Health Services/Paramedical Technologies --Mechanical/Engineering Technologies --Natural Science Technologies --Business and Commerce Technologies --Public Service-related Technologies

Annual number awarded

The number of associate degrees awarded rose rapidly in the 1970s. In 1981-82 (the latest year for which comprehensive data are available), 434,515 associate degrees were awarded, representing a 25 percent increase over the number of associate degrees awarded during 1973-74. All of the increase is accounted for by growth in the number of vocational degrees awarded. Between 1973-74 and 1981-82, percent changes in the number of associate degrees awarded were as follows:

--Arts and Sciences or General Programs (-4.5%) --Data Processing Technologies (225%) --Mechanical and Engineering Technologies (86%) --Business and Commerce Technologies (39%) --Health Services and Paramedical Technologies (31%) --Natural Sciences Technologies (30%) --Public Service-related Technologies (-7%)

In terms of absolute numbers, 158,000 nonvocational and 276,493 vocational associate degrees were awarded in 1981-82. Of the vocational degrees awarded, 35% were in business and commerce technologies, 22% were in health services and paramedical technologies; 21% were in mechanical and engineering technologies; 9% were in public service-related technologies; 5% were in natural science technologies; and 8% were in data processing technologies.

The growing popularity of vocational degrees is not necessarily a sign of the diminution of the transfer function, because many occupational students transfer to senior institutions. Indeed, a study conducted by the State University of New York (SUNY) found that 29 percent of SUNY community college students receiving vocational associate degrees in 1980 transferred to a four-year institution.

Illinois data also shed light on transfers with vocational associate degrees. Of the 3,871 students who transferred with an associate degree from an Illinois community college to an Illinois senior institution in Fall 1979, 19 percent (727) held the associate in applied science (AAS) degree. While the baccalaureate attainment rate for AAS transfers (19%) was lower than the baccalaureate attainment rate of those transfers with associate of arts or associate of science degrees (31%), it was higher than the attainment rate of those community college transfers who had earned no associate degree at all (11%).

Students who earn this degree

Since 1976-77, over 50 percent of associate degrees have been earned by women. Though female students are beginning to enter occupational curricula in which women have been traditionally underrepresented, most women who obtain occupational associate degrees remain in health, office and public service occupations. The 1981-82 data reveal that women made up:

--88% of the recipients in health services and paramedical technologies (compared to 89% in 1971-72)

--65% of the recipients in business and commerce technologies (compared to 47% in 1971-72)

--52% of the recipients in public service-related technologies (compared to 38.6% in 1971-72)

--50% of the degree recipients in data processing technologies (compared to 30% in 1971-72)

--41% of the degree recipients in natural science technologies (compared to 24% in 1971-72)

--9% of the degree recipients in mechanical and engineering technologies (compared to 2% in 1971-72)

Of the nonvocational associate degrees awarded in 1981-82, 54% were awarded to women (compared to 43% in 1971-72).

Problems

Koltai (1984) presents a comprehensive analysis of the current status of the associate degree. He reports several issues that need to be addressed as community college educators plan associate degree programs for the future. These issues include:

--the relatively low prestige of the degree in higher education

--college-by-college variation in subject area and unit requirements

--the fact that many colleges and universities prefer their own transfer requirements rather than accepting the associate degree as qualifying students for transfer

--the need to keep up with high technology in vocational associate degree programs

--the desirability of competency-based programs that certify the learning outcomes of associate degree programs

--the need for more honor sections to attract and retain gifted students

--The types of courses for terminal two year programs are not adequate (or not transferable) for a for year college.

In light of these issues, Koltai recommends that colleges establish testing and placement procedures for entering students, specify competency standards for degree graduates, improve the pre-service and in-service professional development of community college faculty, and establish associate degree committees to work with faculty, students, four-year institutions and businesses in improving counseling, job-placement, and transfer.

Bibliography

ASSOCIATE DEGREES: A LOOK AT THE 70'S., NATIONAL CENTER FOR EDUCATIONAL STATISTICS BULLETIN. Washington, D.C.: National Center for Education Statistics, 1981. ED 207 628.

Bragg, A. K. FALL 1979 TRANSFER STUDY. REPORT 3: SECOND YEAR PERSISTENCE AND ACHIEVEMENT. Springfield: Illinois Community College Board, 1982. ED 230 228.

Koltai, L. REDEFINING THE ASSOCIATE DEGREE. Washington, D.C.: American Association of Community and Junior Colleges, 1984. ED 242 378.

SUNY COMMUNITY COLLEGE GRADUATES: THEIR FUTURES. ANALYSIS PAPER NO. 822. Albany: State University of New York, Office for Community Colleges, 1982. ED 223 282.

Wittstruck, J. R. REQUIREMENTS FOR CERTIFICATES, DIPLOMAS AND ASSOCIATE DEGREES: A SURVEY OF THE STATES. Denver, CO: State Higher Education Executive Officers Association, 1985

External links

  • The Current Status of the Associate Degree http://www.ericdigests.org/pre-922/current.htm
  • Measuring Student Outcomes through the Associate Degree http://www.ericdigests.org/pre-923/outcomes.htm


Last updated: 02-11-2005 01:13:38
Last updated: 03-13-2005 10:56:30