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Hello
could you write a software that manages all the forum questions around the world where people ask for help finding a topic for them....
And guess what, the answer is always more or less the same:
WE CANNOT DO THIS FOR YOU
And then finding a topic is part of what you must demonstrate to your examiners.
If I were a teacher, when a student proposed a topic to me, I would go around the forums to see if someone whispered the idea to him.... And if I found out they did, it wouldn't be good for him.
I would prefer if he came to me saying,
--
When I was little, the Dead Sea was just sick.
George Burns
could you write a software that manages all the forum questions around the world where people ask for help finding a topic for them....
And guess what, the answer is always more or less the same:
WE CANNOT DO THIS FOR YOU
- we don't know your skills
- we don't know what you've been taught
- we may not even understand what "Management G3" means in your own country (if it even exists....)
- we don't even know if we're from the same country.....
- we don't know the topics that have already been presented and that obviously should be avoided
- etc....
And then finding a topic is part of what you must demonstrate to your examiners.
If I were a teacher, when a student proposed a topic to me, I would go around the forums to see if someone whispered the idea to him.... And if I found out they did, it wouldn't be good for him.
I would prefer if he came to me saying,
I don't have many ideas, do you have any research leads.
--
When I was little, the Dead Sea was just sick.
George Burns
To ensure we all die less stupid, the "graduat" is a title inherited from Belgian studies, and one readily sees it by extension in the former Belgian Congo.
It is said to be equivalent to a bachelor's degree after 3 years... but is followed by a 2-year master's degree that supposedly grants a title equivalent to a master's, go figure...
It is validated (we're not in a master's program but at 3 years of study) not by a thesis but by internships in the third year, which should precisely provide the perfect opportunity to imagine the "final project" that should follow.
Just doing a general search on the internet will flood you with similar questions (plagiarizing the work in question), which is surprising both in terms of the motivation of the students and the fact that, after 3 years of study, it is astounding that a student who has been exposed to a large number of subjects hasn't found one that interests them even a little to want to delve deeper into it.
thank you for these clarifications
Before the alignment with Bologna, what was called "license" in Belgium became "Master," the second cycle of higher education.
The first cycle was called "candidature." Or, in the case of short higher education, "graduat" or "régendat."
Since the alignment with Bologna, the first cycle of higher education is now called "bachelor" everywhere, except in France and Portugal, where "license" is used.
All this explains why a Belgian "graduat" was considered equivalent to a three-year French "license"... but is followed by a Belgian "license" in two years which would confer a title equivalent to a Bologna master's degree.
This notion of "bachelor" has always existed in the United States (B.A., B.Sc...) and was recently introduced in France where any term with an Anglo-Saxon sound is meant to impress the layman; this "bachelor" in France refers to a Bac+3 program, unlike the unrecognized licenses by the State, which therefore offer a mix and do not confer a systematic right to enroll in the Master's cycle.