n
(UK) An academic course intended to equip students with the skills they need in order to take further courses.
n
The state of being an alumnus.
n
A thesis for bachelor's degree.
v
(rare) To add letters (indicating rank or education etc.) to one's name as little more than decoration
n
An official document certifying the details of a person's birth. Name, date, and parents' names are always present; details such as parents' occupation and religion may be included.
n
A monetary award to university students that allows them to continue their studies.
n
(business, education) A course of study in higher education intended to prepare the students for a career in business.
n
That part of a scholar's work that is done in class.
v
To educate children of both sexes together.
v
Alternative spelling of co-educate [To educate children of both sexes together.]
n
(economics) The wage premium due to having a college/university degree.
n
(UK, archaic) One at a university who pays extraordinary fees for the degree he is to take.
n
A school whose speciality is helping students to pass certain examinations.
v
(transitive, Oxbridge, otherwise rare, informal) To send (a student) to see the dean of a college or university.
n
(in a university) One of the divisions of instructions
n
The highest degree awarded by a university faculty.
n
A model of how learners can acquire skills through formal instruction and practicing, used in the fields of education and operations research.
n
Someone who is to be, or is being educated
n
A college publication distributed at the start of the academic year by university administrations with the intention of helping students get to know each other better.
n
A doctoral program which offers studies in various fields of business and management.
n
A scholarship that covers all tuition, and in some cases fees or other educational and living expenses as well.
n
(education) An educator whose method is to provide students with occasional advice, assistance, and correction while allowing them to explore a subject area independently or by interacting among themselves; this educational method itself.
n
An academic qualification, prerequiring a PhD, required in order to gain tenure as a professor in some European universities; a thesis or dissertation presented to achieve the qualification.
n
(US) A list of high-achieving students at a university or college.
n
US standard spelling of honours degree. [A type of university qualification: generally the highest-ranking type of undergraduate degree, though details differ by country or education system. See the Wikipedia article Honours degree.]
n
A student who studies in an institution of higher learning in a foreign country and is required to hold a student visa.
n
(US) A welfare system in which a person must attend college etc. in order to receive payment.
n
(by extension) a class that primarily consists of a (weekly or other regularly held) lecture (as in sense 1) [usually at college or university]
n
A section of learning or teaching into which a wider learning content is divided.
n
(education) A teacher's document used to plan a lesson.
v
(intransitive, US, scholastic) To earn a varsity letter (award).
n
(US) A student who has attained a specified level of participation in a sporting or other activity, and is awarded a cloth “letter” to be affixed to an item of clothing.
n
(Australia, colloquial) A mandatory subject taken at school.
n
(education) A class, typically in a performing art such as music or drama, in which a teacher listens to and critiques the performance of individual students, one at a time, while the other students look on.
n
Someone who matriculates, an enroller on a course, especially for a school.
v
To use a Moodle, either as a teacher or as a student.
n
(obsolete, UK, Cambridge University) A student who is not dependent on any foundation for support, but pays all university charges; at Oxford called a commoner.
n
(education, historical) A system of children's education in which one group studied while another group carried out activities.
n
(informal) A postdoctoral academic research position.
n
Something, such as a title or abbreviation denoting an attained academic degree or a membership in an organization, which is placed after a name.
n
One who studies under supervision of a renowned expert in their field.
n
A private class that augments a university course of studies by reviewing material, typically found in the German system.
n
(chiefly Bangladesh, India, Pakistan) A timetabled academic curriculum.
n
A student; one who studies at school or college, typically having a scholarship.
n
The office or function of a scholarch
n
(obsolete, rare) Scholarship.
n
The character or qualities of a scholar.
n
A paper, issued by a government, that a parent can use as payment for his or her child's tuition at any school.
n
Training or instruction.
n
Work done for school, including both in class and homework.
n
(obsolete) severe discipline
n
A class held for advanced studies in which students meet regularly to discuss original research, under the guidance of a professor.
n
(education) A work experience option where students learn about a job by walking through the work day as a shadow to a competent worker.
n
The theory that people who have completed an academic degree earn more income, not because of the knowledge they gained during their education, but rather because their degree indicates things about their personality that employers find favourable.
n
(education) A scholarship granted to a student. [from 20th c.]
n
The role or position of being a student.
v
(academic) To take a course or courses on a subject.
n
(Internet slang) An Instagram account focused on studying or academia.
n
Alternative spelling of superuser [(computing) A user with complete access to the operating system and its configuration.]
v
(US) To work as a teacher in a school; to be a schoolteacher.
n
(academia) Scholarly interest and research.
n
(India, Malaysia, Singapore) Paid private classes taken outside of formal education; tutoring. (also used attributively)
n
An interactive class taught by a tutor to students at university or college, individually or in small groups.
adj
Of or relating to a program that allows university students to work part-time while attending school
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