@clacke yeah, a university is where you go to get your Bachelor's degree, but some have programs where you filter in from that University in to a separate school to get your Masters degree. Like for example, You have George Mason University where you go to get your Bachelor's degree, but if for example, you want to get a JD which is essentially a law degree, you would get filtered in to the George Mason owned Law School which is called something entirely different. It really depends on the University. Some universities aren't big enough to offer such on there own, so they might create partnerships with sister schools to filter people in to after they've gotten there Bachelor's degrees. Community college is meant mainly for people to work on either finishing there Bachelor's degree if for example, they left school and want to finish getting there credits at a community college like what I'm doing, or, for people starting out in Community College, they would work on getting there Associates degree which takes 2 years and is the mid-way point to getting your Bachelor's degree, but they'd get filtered in to a public University to continue there education after getting thereAssociates degree to ultimately get a Bachelor's degree and then maybe move on to getting a Masters degree. George mason University in particular is incredibly huge and has a variety of different Master's degree programs for people who have there Bachelors degree, not just law, I just know about the law program because for a while I was headed toward that point.