The Office of the Registrar Academic & Classroom Scheduling works closely with the school and departmental schedule deputies to coordinate the scheduling of classes. The resulting schedule is an ...
Classes are maintained in the Student Information System, also known as SIS. The module within SIS where classes are maintained is called the Schedule of Classes or SOC. In order to fully explain the ...
It is common for classes to have multiple meeting patterns. Students will see the instructions for viewing a class meeting pattern within the View My Classes menu in the HUB Student Center. Remote: ...
For enrollment purposes, the Associated Class Number is used to link all class sections that constitute a single course offering. For example, if you are scheduling one lecture component with multiple ...
The primary objective of class scheduling is student access to required classes by optimizing space utilization throughout the week. Equally critical is a scheduling plan so tenured and tenure-track ...
Classes with non-standard meeting dates are defined as Special Sessions. These are generally 5 or 8 week classes, but there are others. After you have followed the instructions in the Basic Scheduling ...
What is a multiple offering? A multiple offering is a group of courses that have the same name and content, but are housed in multiple departments under multiple subjects or are offered as ...
A1 - 8:00am-8:50am M, W, Th A2 - 8:00am-9:20am T, F B - 9:05am-9:55am M, W, Th Bx - 8:30am-9:50am M, W C - 10:10am-11:00am M, W, Th D - 11:15am-12:05pm M, W, Th E ...
Visit myub.buffalo.edu and click on the HUB Student Center to view your class schedule. Under the "Manage Classes" tile, you will be able to view your classes, including the days, times, instruction ...
I love when new courses come out, and I hate choosing between courses, sentiments which I think are shared among my fellow undergraduates. Despite the inordinate amount of time I pour into course ...
Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook When Martha Pollack, the University’s vice provost for academic and budgetary affairs, told her ...