Details, Explanation and Meaning About Degrees of Oxford University

Degrees of Oxford University Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

This article concerns the Degrees of Oxford University.

The system of academic degrees in the University of Oxford can be confusing to those not familiar with it. This is not merely because many degree titles date from the Middle Ages, but also because many changes have been haphazardly introduced in recent years. For example, the (medieval) BD, BM, BCL, etc. are postgraduate degrees, while the (modern) MPhys, MEng, etc. are undergraduate degrees.

In postnominals Oxford University is normally abbreviated Oxon. which is short for (Academia) Oxoniensis, e.g. MA (Oxon.)

Table of contents
1 Undergraduate degrees
2 Postgraduate degrees
3 See also
4 External links

Undergraduate degrees

leading to the degree of

  • Master of Arts (MA)

Until recently, all undergraduates studied for the degree of Bachelor of Arts. The Bachelor's degree is awarded soon after the end of the degree course (3 or 4 years after matriculation). The degree of Master of Arts follows 21 terms (7 years) after matriculation without further examination.

This dates from the Middle Ages, when the study of the seven liberal arts took 7 years, and was divided into the trivium (grammar, rhetoric, logic) and the quadrivium (arithmetic, geometry, music and astronomy). While the length of the degree course has since been shortened to 3 or 4 years, the University of Oxford still requires seven years to pass before the awarding of the MA. The universities of Cambridge and Dublin have similar systems. In the four ancient universities of Scotland the MA is awarded as a first degree on completion of the four-year undergraduate degree course in the arts.

The shortening of the degree course reflected the fact that much of the teaching of the liberal arts was taken over by high schools (also known as "grammar schools") and undergraduates now enter university at a much older age. In France students get their baccalaureate (baccalaureus is Latin for bachelor's degree) at the end of high school.

Until 2000, only MAs (as well as certain higher doctors) were members of the University Convocation, which elects the Chancellor of the University. Prior to then, members of the university who had not yet been made MA were known as "junior members" while those who were MAs were "senior members". This conveniently excluded most postgraduate students from the privileges the university and colleges accord to their graduate alumni, such as the right to dine at High Table.

Undergraduate masters degrees

In the 1990s the degrees of Master of Engineering, etc., were introduced for the four-year degree undergraduate programmes in those subjects:

Note that biology undergraduates are still awarded the BA/MA, as are all other undergraduates, whether their degree courses last three years or four years.

Postgraduate degrees

In medieval times many subjects could not be studied until one had completed one's study in the liberal arts. These were known as the higher faculties, and they comprise the subjects named above (other than Philosophy). The higher bachelors degree programme is generally a taught programme of one or two years for graduates. In Medicine and Surgery this corresponds to the clinical phase of training, after which they are commonly entitled to be known as "Doctor". The BPhil/MPhil is a research degree which is often a stepping stone to the DPhil.

Due to pressure from employers and overseas applicants to conform with United States practice, which is also that of most other UK universities, the BLitt and the BSc were renamed masters' degrees. However, the more prestigious BD, BCL, BM BCh, BMus and philosophy BPhil degrees have seen no need to change.

Higher degrees

  • Doctor of Divinity (DD)
  • Doctor of Medicine (DM)
  • Master of Surgery (MCh) (the distinction between master and doctor was in medieval times not significant)
  • Doctor of Civil Law (DCL)
  • Doctor of Letters (DLitt)
  • Doctor of Science (DSc)
  • Doctor of Music (DMus)
  • Doctor of Philosophy (DPhil)

Bachelors in the higher faculties other than Medicine and Surgery can proceed to a doctorate in the same faculty without further examination, on presentation of evidence of an important contribution to their subject, e.g. published work, research, etc. Doctorates in the higher faculties may also be awarded honoris causa, i.e. as honorary degrees.

The DPhil is a research degree introduced at Oxford in 1914, and has a lower status than the so-called "higher doctorates" (i.e. those doctorates other than in Philosophy). Rather atypically, it was Oxford that was the first university in the UK to introduce research degrees, which had previously been a German / American concept.

Recent innovations

Recently other degrees have been introduced:

  • Doctor of Clinical Psychology (DClinPsych)
  • Master of Business Administration (MBA)
  • Master of Studies (MSt)
  • Magister Juris (MJur) (equivalent to the BCL for non-common-law graduates)

See also

External links


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