The Faculty of Arts strongly recommends that returning students request course preferences during each term's course selection week and adjust courses during the official add/drop period for each term to maximize their chances of obtaining access to limited enrolment courses. Class enrolment periods and the last date to add or drop a course can be found on Quest-Important Dates.
Students should consult their academic advisor regarding selection of courses.
Prerequisites
The requirement(s) that must be met in order to be eligible to enrol in a course. Prerequisities may include passed courses, registration in a specific program or plan, and an academic level or academic standing.
Antirequisites
Courses noted as being antirequisites to each other have significant overlap but not considered to be equivalent as is the case with cross-listed courses. Students who take antirequisite courses will not receive credit for both.
Cross-listed courses
Cross-listed courses are considered to be equivalent in content. Students enrolled in a course which is cross-listed should be aware that the course will automatically fulfill a Bachelor of Arts Breadth Requirement for either the subject in which they are registering or the cross-listed subject, but not both. For example, a student registered in PACS 203/HIST 232 may receive credit for either the Transdisciplinary Studies requirement or the Humanities requirement, but not for both.
Similarly, students should be aware that all courses taken under a subject which is cross-listed with a course within the student's plan are included in the plan average.
Repeated courses
When a course is repeated, both grades are entered with all other grades in calculating the student's averages. Only one of the two attempts will count for credit towards the degree.
In rare cases when a student repeats a successfully completed course that has subsequently been cleared (given credit but grade does not count in average), the second instance will not receive credit and will normally not count in the student's averages.
- A failed course may be repeated once.
- A passed course may not be repeated except under exceptional circumstances, and then only once and only under all the following conditions:
- if the student's academic advisor recommends the repetition;
- if, in the event that the course in question is not within the student's major, the department offering the course also recommends the repetition; and
- if the Arts Examinations and Standings Committee approves the petition for repetition of the course in advance of registration for the repetition.
Double-counting
Arts Faculty regulations require that for any combination of academic plans:
- at least 50% of the courses taken to fulfill the requirements of any academic plan must be unique to that plan, and
- after criteria in number one has been applied, a maximum of 2.5 academic course units (five courses) may be counted towards two academic plans.
The practice of counting a course towards two different academic plans is known as "double-counting". Specializations, such as the Finance Specialization in Economics, are regarded as being housed within the main academic plan (i.e., major), and so are not subject to concerns about double-counting between them since a Specialization is not considered an actual plan but, rather, a sub-plan of the major. Courses used towards fulfilling the Bachelor of Arts' Breadth Requirements are not subject to the double-counting rule.
Under no circumstances are students allowed to "triple-count" (i.e., count one course towards three separate academic plans).