Sociology has the lowest percentage of faculty earning doctorates from the top PhD programs. |
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He was awarded five honorary doctorates by universities, two in the US and three in Britain. |
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As always, the report reviewed the overall trends in doctorates awarded at American universities across seven broad fields. |
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He will be joined by eight other people, ranging from academics to charity fundraisers, who will receive honorary doctorates from the university. |
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He was awarded doctorates from universities all around the world and received honoraria for numerous public speeches. |
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Under the headship of the neo-behaviorist Kenneth W. Spence, it led America in the production of psychology doctorates for many years. |
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She retired from politics in 1989 with 28 honorary doctorates and two nominations for the Nobel Peace Prize. |
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Among many other honours, we should mention that he received honorary doctorates from the universities of Athens and Tel Aviv. |
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Rudin has received many honours for her work, including at least four honorary doctorates, and will continue to receive further awards. |
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He was a giant among his peers in the world of science, obtaining three earned doctorates. |
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These were public employees who were expected to hold degrees or doctorates in administration or jurisprudence. |
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Only in very special cases do academics receive honorary doctorates from their own universities. |
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Some schools have resorted to filling chairs with professors who hold doctorates in other fields. |
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Most of them possessed master's degrees, and a few had earned their doctorates. |
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The number of researchers has doubled, and a larger proportion now have master's degrees and doctorates. |
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Similarly astronauts, today's counterpart of the pioneer ocean-crossers of yesteryear, seem by no means youthful and tend to have doctorates in the most abstruse subjects. |
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Of course, it did not escape him, that the number of doctorates, habilitations, and docents slowly but surely fell off, although the number of students increased considerably. |
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Virtually all of them have advanced degrees, some of which are doctorates. |
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The main point here is that the majority of universities offering creative writing doctorates have not yet fully published their examination criteria. |
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However, self-employed individuals in the earth sciences, physics and astronomy, and political science were the highest-paid doctorates in their field. |
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Being museum types, it was a plastic file with photocopies, but as a memorial to achievement, it meant more than the Garter or a peerage or a letterhead of doctorates. |
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She has also been conferred honorary doctorates by the University of Wales and the University of Glamorgan. |
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Most frequently, issues of chilly climate are noted among women pursuing doctorates in the sciences and engineering. |
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French tuition fees are capped based on the level of education pursued, from 183 Euros per year for undergraduate up to 388 for doctorates. |
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University degrees, including doctorates, were originally restricted to men. |
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Professional doctorates developed in the United States from the 19th century onward. |
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In the UK, research doctorates initially took the form of higher doctorates, introduced from 1882 onwards. |
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These doctorates are now less common in some countries and are often awarded honoris causa. |
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Since the Middle Ages, the number and types of doctorates awarded by universities has proliferated throughout the world. |
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In the UK and Ireland, all doctorates are third cycle qualifications in the Bologna Process, comparable to US research doctorates. |
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Until the 1990s, most natural science and engineering doctorates in Japan were earned by industrial researchers in Japanese companies. |
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The PhD was often distinguished from the earlier higher doctorates by distinctive academic dress. |
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Integrated doctorates, originally known as 'New Route PhDs', were introduced from 2000 onwards. |
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The duration of integrated doctorates is a minimum of four years, with three years spent on the research component. |
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Higher doctorates are awarded in recognition of a substantial body of original research undertaken over the course of many years. |
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The University of Cambridge began to award doctorates in the first third of the 20th century. |
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The University of Oxford began to award doctorates in the first third of the 20th century. |
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Several universities awarded him honorary doctorates, including Yale and Harvard. |
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If there was doctorates in bollocksology and scratching yourself in bed, the two of you'd be professors by now. Pair of loafing, idle thicks. |
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Maitland held honorary doctorates from the universities of Cambridge, Oxford, Glasgow, Moscow and Cracow. |
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The judicial vicar and the assistant judicial vicars must be priests with doctorates or at least licenses in canon law. |
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Many programmes may be taught in the English language, the academic lingua franca, in bachelor's degrees, master's degrees, doctorates and student exchange programmes. |
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Those who have received honoris causa doctorates may use dr. |
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Depending on the country, professional doctorates may either be research degrees at the same level as PhDs or professional degrees with little or no research content. |
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Higher doctorates are often also awarded honoris causa when a university wishes to formally recognize an individual's achievements and contributions to a particular field. |
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A higher tier of research doctorates may be awarded on the basis of a formally submitted portfolio of published research of a particularly high standard. |
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Master's degrees take one to three years, again with the exception of Quebec where they take one and a half to two years, and doctorates take a minimum of three years. |
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