When you graduate from a University (BA) how do you then pursue you MA ?

<p>What is the process you must do ? Do you need to give the other university your credits from the university you attended ?
Does it include recommendation letters from your professors ?</p>

<p>I will attend Brock University in Canada. But later , I wish to pursue my MA at an American university . The campuses which I consider to attend are : University of Miami , Vanderbilt University , and maybe Notre Dame if neither of those accepts me . </p>

<p>@IsraeliStudent‌: Based on your several recent threads – not this one alone – it is my opinion that you REALLY need to do some basic, independent research before you ask such fundamental questions; however:

  1. You apply (and the graduate and/or professional schools’ application processes are entirely separate from the undergraduate schools’).
  2. Of course, all the postgraduate schools to which you apply will require your undergraduate transcript(s);
  3. Of course, the application process includes recommendations from Bachelor’s-level professors (and possibly others, as well).
  4. In addition, you must take the applicable standardized test (e.g., GRE for graduate school, GMAT for MBA programs, LSAT for law school, etc.); for your delineated objective, the GREs.
  5. Finally, based on the your scant foregoing information, it appears that your goal is an MA at some US university; however, it is crucial that you understand that you don’t just apply for “general” postgraduate school at institution x; rather, you apply for a highly-specific field of study at that university’s graduate school.</p>

<p>You are worrying about graduate school far too early. You say you are planning to attend Brock university. Welll, in your time there you will have to choose a major and meet professors who will help to direct you to an appropriate graduate program and will provide you with reference letters. You have a long way ahead of you, don’t worry about it now.</p>

<p>Check out the Graduate School Admissions 101 thread - a lot of basic questions are answered there.</p>

<p>And also, if you haven’t yet decided what programs to apply to yet, don’t fixate on specific universities. Vanderbilt or Notre Dame might not even have a program, or a good program, in what you end up wanting a career in.</p>