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A. Academic Calendar (University
Senate Document 90-30, April 22, 1991)
- The academic calendar shall consist of two 16-week
semesters and three four-week summer modules. In each
semester session, classes shall begin with the first
instructional period of the first day.
- The calendar for students enrolled in the fourth
year of veterinary medicine will comprise 12 blocks
of approximately one month duration. The starting
dates for the blocks will be chosen so that the
end of the 12th block coincides with the end of
the second semester (University
Senate Document 73-15, March 18, 1977).
- The second semester for fifth year pharmacy
students will begin on the first Monday in January
and end the 18th following Saturday. During this
semester each of these students will be scheduled
for two six-week externships and one three-week
clerkship.
- The first semester shall begin on either the third
or fourth Monday of August, be in recess Monday and
Tuesday of the eighth week, and Wednesday, Thursday,
Friday, and Saturday of Thanksgiving week, and classes
will end on the 17th following Saturday, which shall
not occur after the 20th day of December. The second
semester shall begin on either the first or second
Monday of January, which shall not occur prior to
the seventh day of January, be in recess during the
tenth week, and end on the 17th following Saturday
(University Senate Document
96-4, February 17, 1997).
- The summer session shall begin on the next Monday
following the spring commencement and will comprise
three four-week modules. Courses may be scheduled
during any one or any combination of modules throughout
the 12-week period. There shall be no classes on Memorial
Day, the last Monday in May, or on July 4, nor on
the nearest class day when July 4 is not a regular
class day.
- Grades shall be delivered to the registrar as completed,
but no later than 5 p.m. on the second working day
after the end of the respective academic term. Special
arrangements may be made with the registrar to deliver
grades on a nonworking day.
- Commencement will be held as follows: First Semester:
first Sunday following the end of the first semester;
Second Semester: next subsequent weekend after the
end of the second semester; Summer Session: first
Sunday following the end of the last summer module.
- The faculties at regional campuses shall be free
to establish their own calendar dates.
B. Final Examinations (University
Senate Document 84-12, March 25, 1985)
- In regular semesters, the final examination period
shall consist of six scheduled days comprising the
16th week of the semester. The two-hour class meetings
during the six days of the final examination period
will be scheduled at the discretion of the Educational
Policy Committee on the advice of the Office of
the Registrar as, at most, 30 two-hour periods (five
periods per day, including evenings).
Upon request, a single coursewide examination will
be scheduled for any course.
In the summer session, the final examination schedule
shall be appropriately scaled to meet the demand.
It shall be scheduled at the discretion of the Educational
Policy Committee on the advice of the Office of the
Registrar in, at most, 12 two-hour periods on the
last three days of the session (four periods per
day, excluding evenings).
- Each class will be scheduled for a two-hour meeting
during the final examination period. Excepted are
those courses classified as individual study, clinic,
student teaching, industrial experience (co-op), or
research and those offered for zero credit. However,
any such course will be included in the schedule upon
the specific request of the appropriate schedule deputy.
If no educational purpose will be served by any type
of meeting during the 16th week because the educational
objectives of the course have been achieved, a department
may dismiss this class meeting during the 16th week.
- Two weeks after the beginning of any regular semester
and one week after the beginning of the summer session,
schedule deputies shall inform the Office of the
Registrar of the courses requiring coursewide examinations.
It will be the responsibility of the department head
or, where appropriate, the school head to inform
the Office of
the Registrar
which courses within the department or school will
not need a meeting. A schedule implementing Section
I-B (Under Part
II of this handbook. This is true of all section references
in this part unless otherwise specified.) will
then be developed by the Office of the Registrar
in consultation with the Educational Policy Committee.
Guiding principles include:
- Minimize the number of direct student examination
conflicts.
- Minimize the number of students who have more
than two examinations on the same day.
- Minimize the number of students who have consecutive
(back-to-back) examinations.
No student shall be required to take more than two
examinations on one day.
- The Office of the Provost shall implement a procedure
to inform faculty and students of the academic regulations
governing end-of-semester exams and activities each
semester to coincide with the release of the final
examination class schedule.
- Students scheduled for more than two examinations
in one calendar day are entitled to reschedule any
examinations in excess of two. Similarly, students
faced with a direct exam conflict are entitled to
reschedule either examination. It is the responsibility
of the student to make the necessary arrangements
before the last week of regularly scheduled classes.
Course instructors shall not penalize a student who
chooses to reschedule an examination under these options
(University Senate Document
90-22, March 25, 1991).
- Regional campuses may modify these provisions to
meet local differences through established procedures
of the local faculty governing bodies or, lacking
these, the regional campus chancellor or designee.
- The final examination period is intended for the
end-of-semester examination. No examination or quiz
may be given during the week (three days in summer
session) preceding the final examination period of
the semester (examinations for laboratory, intensive,
or minicourses excluded). It will be the responsibility
of the department head or, where appropriate, the
school head to ensure that none of the departmental
or school faculty use the week (three days in summer
session) preceding the final examination period to
administer an examination.
- Comprehensive final examinations (examinations
for laboratory, intensive or minicourses excluded)
are prohibited except during the regular final examination
periods of the last week of the semester.
C. Summer Sessions Work
Regular work offered in the summer sessions shall be
equivalent in method, content, and credit value to the
work of the academic year, regular class and laboratory
periods being increased proportionately. Four summer
sessions may count as one year of residence.
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