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I am hoping someone reading this can help me in this area. I am an Applied Chemistry undergraduate and I want to earn my PhD, however ,the PhD programs in the US are very long spanning about 5-7 years. My goal is to go straight from undergraduate to PhD. From what I am reading this is possible. I just need help with the process.

  1. What do I do and where do I start?
  2. Are the PhD programs in Europe competitive and do I need a certain GPA?
  3. I am really seeking a PhD program where I can finish in 3 years without doing my Masters?
  4. But how do I get in?
  5. And what universities have PhD programs best for Chemistry that I can get into?
  6. I just want to know where to start and what are the requirements so that I can proceed the application process. Any advice anyone?
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    Too many questions, and questions are too broad. A PhD is not an extended undergrad degree. – Cheery May 10 '23 at 01:54
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    Also ‘Europe’ isn’t one place, some Americans might be surprised to know – user438383 May 10 '23 at 05:15
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    The answers to this question might be relevant to you. There you can also see that in many European countries you need a Masters degree to start a PhD. That's essentially the reasons why PhDs there tend to be shorter. – Jochen Glueck May 10 '23 at 05:38
  • See the linked question for #1, 2, and 4. #3 is addressed by the preceeding comment. And #5-6 are not the kind of questions we can take here. Good luck. – cag51 May 10 '23 at 07:26

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