'Better' is a judgement, and you are the judge.
Film sets are ad hoc work places populated by people with talent. The talent may or may not be blessed with educational degrees. Once you demonstrate your talent on a film set, you are better prepared to be invited to participate in additional projects.
The question correctly spells a "bachelor's degree" and an "associate's degree".
The associate degree is an undergraduate degree, as well as the bachelor's degree.
You can start with an associate degree, then the bachelor's degree. To pursue a master's or doctorate, you must complete a bachelor's degree first.
No. An associate's degree is never a requirement for a Bachelor's degree, but having one can help some people who lack good High School records get into at Bachelor's program.
You can get virtual degrees in anywhere between 6 months to 2 years, depending on what you are studying. It will take longer to get a Bachelor's degree than an Associate's, however a Bachelor's degree will get you a better job and more options later on than an Associate's degree will.
No. A graduate degree is one receive after having already graduated from college. Roughly it goes like this (at least within the American system): Associate's degree is usually a "2-year degree" and is considered less than a Bachelor's degree. It is technically a college degree but is usually though of as sort of half of a Bachelor's degree. Bachelor's degree is usually a "4-year degree" and is considered better than an Associate's degree. Some programs are set up to get you a Bachelor's degree in two years if you already have an Associate's degree. BOTH Associates and Bachelor's are referred to as "undergraduate" - even if you got an Associate's degree first and then went on to get a Bachelor's degree. If you got a second Bachelor's degree you would be considered to have 2 undergraduate degrees. A Master's degree usually requires that you already have a Bachelor's degree before starting on it. A Master's degree is usually the lowest level of "Graduate" degree. The other type of "Graduate" degree is a Doctorate. Doctoral degrees programs also usually require that you have a Bachelor's degree before you start work on it. Associate's < Bachelor's = both undergraduate < Masters < Doctoral = both graduate
It depends on your career goals and objectives. In addition, it's not that one is better than the other, it's just that they are two different approaches to career goals. That being said, the bachelor's degree is considered a higher degree.
A bachelor degree is a four-year degree and takes about 128 credits to obtain. An associate's degree is a two year degree and takes about 64 credits to obtain.
Associates degree is an undergraduate degree. The associates and bachelor's degrees are undergraduate degrees, The master's and doctorate degrees are graduate degrees.
In order: High School Diploma Associate of Arts Degree Bachelor's Degree Master's Degree Doctoral Degree
Yes. I know several R.N.'s (Registered Nurses) who have an associate degree instead of a bachelor's degree, and they have been very successful in their careers as Registered Nurses. Basically, an assiciate degree is a 'condensed' form of a bachelor's degree, but the associate degree usually doesn't pay as well as a bachelor's degree.
If you are working on an a bachelor's degree, you are in a sense completing much of what is required for an associate degree. However, to obtain the associate degree you must be at an institution that offers the degree, and is the institution you attend offers both degrees, you must declare the associate degree first.