A cross-listed course is the same course catalogued under two or more prefixes (also known as subject codes). Cross-listing of courses can provide faculty an opportunity to collaborate across ...
Students at Brown and the Rhode Island School of Design have historically been able to register for certain courses at the other school as part of a long-standing agreement between the two ...
Cross-listing refers to the act of merging two or more course sections that share the same course content but are offered at different levels (UG/GR) or within different departments. Requests to cross ...
There are two ways that faculty may teach courses that are housed in another academic division: They may teach a cross-listed course. For example, a faculty member teaches a SOC/ATH course that draws ...
Combined courses are unique classes that are scheduled in the same room at the same time. Combined courses are not necessarily equivalent or cross-listed. For example, the Art Department schedules ...
There are many different types of courses at RIT. Some are theoretical while others are hands-on. A beneficial part of hands-on classes — like those offered in RIT’s Media Arts and Technology MS ...
... 2.0 Academic Information & Policies 2.7 Course Registration Academic courses in the first year of the MBA Program are prescribed by the faculty. A student is ...
Offering Cross-Listed, Recommended, and Core GSWS Courses: The Gender, Sexuality, and Women's Studies Program offers its students three types of courses, enabling them to design majors specific to ...