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by richmarr
3289 days ago
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The site lists under its USA entry "Years of tertiary schooling - 1.86 (years)". One would presume that's an average across the country, but that seems really high. Haven't found a deeper data source. For comparison, Denmark lists 0.95 years, UK lists 0.96 years. http://www.socialprogressindex.com/?tab=2&code=USA |
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PhDs and masters are also absolutely monstrously long in the United States - often literally twice or three times as long as in Europe. Fewer people do those of course but maybe that also adds up to a higher average.
In places like the UK you normally go from zero degrees to PhD in six years, while in the United States you could conceivably only just be fishing your masters work at that point.