University of Virginia Library

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expand sectionFOUR. 

  
  

The Academic Schools comprise the Schools of Languages, Mathematics,
Sciences, History, Economics, Literature, Philosophy, and Education,
Journalism, and Public Speaking. In the undergraduate courses of
these Schools is comprised the work of the College, leading to the degrees
of Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Science; in the graduate courses is
comprised the work of the Department of Graduate Studies, leading to the
degrees of Graduate in a School, Master of Arts, Master of Science, and
Doctor of Philosophy.

A full statement of the requirements for the degrees of Bachelor of Arts
and Bachelor of Science will be found under the College (pp. 165-169); of
the requirements for the other academic degrees, under the Department of
Graduate Studies (pp. 172-174).

Designation of Courses.—In the detailed account given in the following
pages of the courses offered in the Academic Schools, courses which have
no credit value toward a degree are designated by numbers alone. All
other courses are designated by letters, which have the following significance:

A: a course for undergraduates, with a credit value toward a baccalaureate
degree of three session-hours, to which students who enter with
advanced standing are entitled, under the conditions set forth on page 162.

B: a course for undergraduates, with a credit value toward a baccalaureate
degree of three session-hours, except in the case of courses in the
natural sciences, which have a credit-value of six session-hours each.

C: a course for undergraduates and graduates.

D: a course for graduates.

A term-course is a short course completed in one of the three terms into
which the academic year is divided. Such a course has credit value as
part of an elective-at-large, but not as part of a group-elective.