DEA (former French degree)

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In France, a DEA (full name: diplôme d'études approfondies, or "diploma of advanced studies") is a (now former) postgraduate degree.

The DEA was a 1-2 years degree taken after a maîtrise (4-year French undergraduate program) in a university prior to entering a doctoral program. The DEA was generally the first year of a doctoral program and is sometimes referred to as a "first doctoral degree". It is generally equivalent to the North American "All But Dissertation" or ABD status within a doctoral program or a Master of Philosophy (M.Phil.) or Master of Research (M.Res.) degree. But in the francophonic universities in Switzerland the DEA / DESS are 1-2 years degrees taken after a licence (4-year Swiss undergraduate degree).

In the hard sciences, it generally consisted of a number of courses, with examinations and grades, followed by an internship in a scientific laboratory. The students would then write a short thesis about the scientific work they did in their internship, and defend this thesis in front of a committee. The grades of the examinations and, if possible, the internship, were used to rank students in order to select those eligible for funding for doctoral studies. Students that would follow up with a Doctorat (Ph.D.) would generally do it in the same laboratory as their internship. See also Master's degree.

DEA's are now subsumed into research-oriented Master's degrees.