Most community colleges offer associate
degrees in the fields of art and design, business, education, health
care, technology, criminal justice and engineering. Often the goal of
these two-year programs is vocational, preparing the student with the
certification necessary to start working as a professional practitioner
with minimal delay. A significant percentage of graduates continue their
education, however, transferring to a four-year college or university.
While specifics vary from school to school and from state to state, a
typical two-year degree program usually includes such requirements as
the successful completion of a minimum number of semester hours of
credit and the completion of a program of general education in the
liberal arts and sciences (which could include courses in the arts and
humanities, mathematics, natural and social science, and possibly a
foreign language), while maintaining an overall grade point average of
at least 2.00.
Among the associate degrees awarded by most colleges are:
Associate of Arts (AA)
Awarded for successful completion of a core liberal arts curriculum with
a concentration in the social sciences and humanities.
Associate of Science (AS)
Awarded for successful completion of a core liberal arts curriculum with
a concentration in the physical sciences.
Associate in Applied Science (AAS)
Awarded for successful completion of a core liberal arts curriculum with
a concentration in a vocational application of the training.