Job Recruitment Website - Immigration policy - How many days do you need to stay in Macao for a master's degree in Australian University of Science and Technology in the first year?

How many days do you need to stay in Macao for a master's degree in Australian University of Science and Technology in the first year?

The length of stay in Macao is calculated as a single stay of no more than 7 days, that is, you need to leave Macao every 7 days and re-enter the country.

A master's degree is a postgraduate degree between a bachelor's degree and a doctorate. A master's degree usually symbolizes the ability to think independently according to his concentration and research field.

In China, ordinary graduate students are divided into academic masters and professional masters (both of which have full-time and part-time study forms), and they mainly enroll students by having postgraduate entrance examinations held by various universities. Part-time graduate students were born on 20 17. Full-time and part-time students began to implement the same examination enrollment policy and training standards. Both are general higher education (unified enrollment), and academic certificates and degree certificates have the same legal status and the same effect.

Master's courses are generally arranged after bachelor's degree. Generally speaking, master's courses take 2-3 years, but depending on the country and departments, some masters can be obtained in one year, and some take 3-4 years. Units that recruit and train graduate students include both ordinary colleges and universities with master's degrees and relevant scientific research institutions with graduate degrees.

CommonwealthofAustralia (in English), with a territory of 7.692 million square kilometers, is located between the South Pacific Ocean and the Indian Ocean, surrounded by the sea. It is the only country in the world whose territory covers the whole continent, so it is also called Australia. Australia is a multicultural immigrant country with many unique flora, fauna and natural landscapes. There are about 670,000 overseas Chinese in Australia, accounting for 3.4 1% of the settled population.