[
US
/ˌbækəˈɫɔɹiət/
]
[ UK /bˈækɐlˌɔːɹiːt/ ]
[ UK /bˈækɐlˌɔːɹiːt/ ]
NOUN
- an academic degree conferred on someone who has successfully completed undergraduate studies
- a farewell sermon to a graduating class at their commencement ceremonies
How To Use baccalaureate In A Sentence
- My baccalaureate, a job as a clerk in the Electricity Department's offices. WHEN THE APRICOTS BLOOM
- The same is true of the latest piece of received wisdom, that all our problems would be solved if we adopted the baccalaureate.
- As the national and state economies move from the industrial to the information age, the need for individuals with baccalaureates is increasing.
- Many colleges, including my current institution, require an intensive service project for completion of the baccalaureate degree.
- The majority of respondents had received their basic nursing education at the baccalaureate level.
- Sailors with a baccalaureate degree or higher are eligible to begin the teaching certification process to become an academic subject teacher.
- Several schools in Britain already teach the baccalaureate syllabus.
- Students graduating from baccalaureate programs are rarely expected to be seasoned experts in the competencies of their chosen field.
- The consortium discovered that less than 50 percent of students followed a traditional path to the baccalaureate degree.
- He attended school in his home town and obtained his baccalaureate in 1881 at the age of seventeen.