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Master Degree Courses: General Information

Contenuto

The new university reform, which is based on Ministerial Decree No 270/2004, aims to redesign first- and second-level degree courses, introducing a number of changes to the degree classes, the names of the degrees awarded and the curricula.

The degrees awarded are:

  • the three-year bachelor's degree (first-level degree);
  • a five-year single-cycle master's degree (Level II qualification);
  • a two-year master's degree (Level II qualification), which can only be obtained after first obtaining a Level I degree.


To obtain a university degree, students must have acquired 180 credits (CFU), distributed over a maximum of 20 examinations; to obtain a five-year master's degree, students must have acquired 300 CFU, distributed over a maximum of 30 examinations; to obtain a two-year master's degree, students must have acquired 120 CFU, distributed over a maximum of 12 examinations.

Undergraduate credit is a measure of the effort required of a student to pass a teaching test (examination or proficiency test).
The number of credits allocated to courses is determined by the Department.
The credits for each course are awarded to the student after he/she has passed the examination, the assessment of which is expressed in thirtieths, or the aptitude test scheduled at the end of the course.

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JURISPRUDENCE (D.M. 270/04)