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What do on-the-job education qualifications and degrees mean?
Education is learning experience, and degree is academic title. Education and education cannot be equated.

Academic qualifications refer to people's learning experience of receiving scientific and cultural knowledge training in educational institutions. At what level of educational institutions and training, a person has a corresponding education level.

Broadly speaking, any learning experience can be an "education" for learners. In society, what people usually call "education" has a specific meaning and a specific value.

What academic qualifications a person has refers to the last and highest level of a person's learning experience, which is issued by schools and other educational institutions that implement academic education and authorized by the state to issue diplomas.

Education can be divided into the following three levels:

Primary education: primary school;

Secondary education: junior high school and senior high school (ordinary high school, vocational high school, secondary specialized school, technical school);

Higher education: junior college, undergraduate, master and doctor;

A degree is an academic title that marks that the educational level and academic level of the grantee have reached the prescribed standards, and it is divided into three levels: bachelor, master and doctor.

Education and education cannot be equated. A degree is an academic title, and a degree is a learning experience.

Having a degree does not necessarily mean having a corresponding degree; Similarly, having a certain degree does not necessarily mean having a corresponding degree. For example, those who have obtained master's or doctor's degree certificates do not necessarily have master's or doctor's degree diplomas; Those who have obtained the undergraduate diploma may not be able to obtain the bachelor's degree certificate.

Those who have only obtained a degree certificate but have not obtained the corresponding academic certificate shall still have their original academic qualifications. If someone graduated from a bachelor's degree and later obtained a doctor's degree through an on-the-job degree application, his degree is still a bachelor's degree, not a "doctor's degree."

There are also differences between on-the-job personnel applying for a degree and on-the-job postgraduate education. On-the-job personnel applying for a degree is not academic education, but has a degree but no academic qualifications. Although on-the-job graduate students are on-the-job, their enrollment, admission methods and training programs are the same as those of full-time graduate students, which belongs to academic education.