Asked by tt
Which of the following is a difference between four-year colleges, community colleges, and technical colleges?
Community colleges are free to attend, but all technical colleges and four-year colleges cost money to attend.
Technical colleges and four-year colleges require students to take either the SAT or the ACT, but community colleges do not.
Texas community colleges only accept students who graduated from high school in Texas, but Texas technical colleges and four-year colleges accept students from any state.
Community colleges and technical colleges offer different degrees than four-year colleges do
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
"Community colleges and technical colleges offer different degrees than four-year colleges do" is the correct difference.
- Community colleges and technical colleges typically award certificates and associate degrees (and focus on job training), while four‑year colleges award bachelor's degrees (and often master's/doctorates).
- (Note: there are exceptions — some community/technical colleges now offer a few bachelor's-level programs — but the degree-level focus is the main general difference.)
- Community colleges and technical colleges typically award certificates and associate degrees (and focus on job training), while four‑year colleges award bachelor's degrees (and often master's/doctorates).
- (Note: there are exceptions — some community/technical colleges now offer a few bachelor's-level programs — but the degree-level focus is the main general difference.)
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