postgraduate academic degree
A master's degree is an advanced academic qualification that students pursue after completing their bachelor's degree, typically requiring one to three years of additional study. It matters because it allows people to develop specialized expertise in their field, which can lead to better job prospects, higher earning potential, and the ability to pursue careers that require advanced knowledge.
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A Master of Science degree conferred by Columbia University in New York City A master's degree (from Latin magister) is a postgraduate academic degree awarded by universities or colleges upon completion of a course of study demonstrating mastery or a high-order overview of a specific field of study or area of professional practice. A master's degree normally requires previous study at the bachelor's level, either as a separate degree or as part of an integrated course. Within the area studied, master's graduates are expected to possess advanced knowledge of a specialized body of theoretical and applied topics; high order skills in analysis, critical evaluation, or professional application; and the ability to solve complex problems and think rigorously and independently.
Historical development
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).