1. |
II. |
III. |
IV. |
I. |
II. |
III. |
I. |
II. |
I. |
II. |
III. |
IV. |
I. |
II. |
III. |
I. |
II. |
I. |
1-2-3. |
4-5-6. |
10-11-12. |
13-14-15. |
16-17-18. |
21-22-23. |
26. |
31-32-33. |
34-35-36. |
40-41-42. |
100. |
106. |
107. |
108-109-110. |
111. |
158-159-160. |
200-201-202. |
250-251-252. |
259. |
300-301-302. |
350-351-352. |
306-307-308. |
356-357-358. |
309-310-311. |
359-360-361. |
318-319-320. |
368-369-370. |
321-322-323. |
371-372-373. |
324-325-326. |
340-341-342. |
386-387-388. |
400-401-402. |
450-451-452. |
403-404-405. |
453-454-455. |
409-410-411. |
459-460-461. |
412-413-414. |
462-463-464. |
521. |
522. |
523. |
524. |
525. |
526. |
527. |
528. |
529. |
541-542-543. |
650. |
661. |
662. |
663. |
670. |
680. |
690. |
691. |
692. |
701. |
703. |
705. |
707. |
715. |
716. |
718. |
719. |
720. |
721. |
722. |
725. |
751. |
755. |
800. |
801. |
802. |
803. |
804. |
805-806-807. |
810. |
811. |
812. |
820-821-822. |
826. |
860-861-862. |
865. |
866. |
900. |
901. |
902. |
903. |
904. |
905. |
906. |
907. |
910. |
911. |
916-917-918. |
920. |
925. |
930-931-932. |
940-941-942. |
950-951. |
953-954-955. |
956. |
960-961. |
966-967-968. |
975. |
980-981. |
990-991-992. |
I. |
I. |
II. |
III. |
IV. |
V. |
VI. |
II. |
Credit Not Given for an Incomplete Course. |
I. |
II. |
III. |
IV. |
V. |
VI. |
VII. |
VII. |
VIII. |
The University of Virginia record March 15, 1929 | ||
Credit Not Given for an Incomplete Course.
Credit can be accepted only when the student has a clear record on the entire
course; for example, if the course in general physics is a six session-hour course
consisting of three hours lecture and six hours laboratory weekly for three trimesters
and the student passes on two trimesters but fails on the third, no credit
for admission to medicine can be given for the portion of the subject passed, even
though the credit value of this work is four session-hours. In all cases the student
must have completed the entire subject for which he is registered. Deficiencies of
this kind may however be made up by obtaining a clear record in the portion of
the subject in which the failure has occurred, without repeating the entire course.
The University of Virginia record March 15, 1929 | ||