Doing a masters degree without a bachelors - any experience of this?

Stanford does the same thing, at least in the Engineering School. It goes by the odd term of “coterminal”.

MIT had something like this also, that went with industrial internships, and which a lot of people did.
I suspect it would be easier to pull off with 78 semesters completed than with no semesters completed, though.

I do know someone who went to college without a high school degree - but she almost finished, the high school was Music and Art in NY, the college was MIT, and she had 800s in math and verbal and in all achievement tests.

Many graduate departments are a lot more flexible than undergraduate ones, since they make the admission decisions, not the admissions office.

I am doing my MA now and don’t have an undergrad degree. I applied for flexible entry, and they considered the education I do have (two, two year diplomas) and my work experience (about 7 years in a career related to my MA). In our class of ~40, there are only two of us that are flexible entry/don’t have an undergrad degree.

I am in Canada, and am currently at Royal Roads University in Victoria, BC. It is a thesis based Masters program.

That said, I am doing an MA, not an MSc. I think if I were to go for a science based masters it would have been a lot tougher to get in without an undergrad degree.

This is why you should start your own thread rather than piggybacking on a zombie thread. As you can see everybody is answering the two year old question and not yours.