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What are the differences between an Associate’s Degree and a Bachelor’s Degree?

Updated October 13, 2022

The Associate’s Degree consists of 100 and 200 level classes and is a minimum of 90 quarter credits or 60 semester credits. A Bachelor’s Degree consists of 100-400 level classes and is a minimum of 180 quarter credits or 120 semester credits.

Typically, an Associate of Arts Oregon Transfer degree (AAOT), Associate of Science (AS) or and Associate of Science Oregon Transfer-Business (ASOTB) will satisfy the first 90-120 quarter credits of a Bachelor degree, leaving the student to complete only the additional 60-90 credits of upper division work (300 and 400 level) for the Bachelor degree at an (public or private). For most full-time students, this means it will take another 2 years of full-time course work after they earn their Associate degree to earn a Bachelor degree.

Though there is no “major” or “minor” on a transfer degree, there may be 100 and 200 level courses required by the transfer institution that can be included on your С»ÆÃ¨´«Ã½ transfer degree and applied toward you Bachelor degree major or minor.

С»ÆÃ¨´«Ã½ students interested in pursuing a Bachelor’s degree should meet with an academic advisor to determine if the Associate Degree they are working on has coursework applicable to a Bachelor degree program.

²Ñ²¹²Ô²âÌýCareer Technical degrees (AAS) have transfer options to Bachelor degree programs.