Education Process
Students, according to their wishes, will have the opportunity to continue their studies at any partner university and get an American diploma in Computer Science after completing three academic years at AUS. After successful education completion in a partner university and gaining American Bachelor degree, alumni can continue studying at graduate school at a partner university and apply on master’s or Ph.D. degree. AUS students who have neither possibilities nor desires to complete education in the U.S.A. study their during fourth year in Ternopil and, after the successful examinations, obtain the Ukrainian Bachelor degree in Computer Science. Students can continue their education in the master department of TNEU or in foreign universities after the fourth year.
The lectures at the AUS are conducting by faculty from the U.S.A., European and Japanese universities, Peace Corps representatives and leading instructors of the Faculty of Computer Information Technologies.
Read more about this topic: American-Ukrainian School Of Computer Sciences And Technologies
Famous quotes containing the words education and/or process:
“Columbus stood in his age as the pioneer of progress and enlightenment. The system of universal education is in our age the most prominent and salutary feature of the spirit of enlightenment, and it is peculiarly appropriate that the schools be made by the people the center of the days demonstration. Let the national flag float over every schoolhouse in the country and the exercises be such as shall impress upon our youth the patriotic duties of American citizenship.”
—Benjamin Harrison (18331901)
“If thinking is like perceiving, it must be either a process in which the soul is acted upon by what is capable of being thought, or a process different from but analogous to that. The thinking part of the soul must therefore be, while impassable, capable of receiving the form of an object; that is, must be potentially identical in character with its object without being the object. Mind must be related to what is thinkable, as sense is to what is sensible.”
—Aristotle (384322 B.C.)