Honours Major Academic Plans
Key: * These academic plans fulfil the requirements for professional membership in The Chemical Institute of Canada (CIC.
Regular
Honours Biochemistry* (joint with Biology - see Biology)
Honours Biochemistry* (Biotechnology Specialization) (joint with Biology - see Biology)
Honours Chemistry*
Honours Chemistry (Biobased Specialization)
Honours Chemistry (Computational Specialization)
Honours Chemistry* (Materials Chemistry Specialization)
Honours Chemical Physics (joint with Physics and Astronomy - see Physics and Astronomy)
Honours Geochemistry (joint with Earth and Environmental Sciences)
Honours Materials and Nanosciences (joint with Physics and Astronomy - see Physics and Astronomy)
Co-operative
Honours Co-operative Biochemistry* (joint with Biology - see Biology)
Honours Co-operative Biochemistry* (Biotechnology Specialization) (joint with Biology - see Biology)
Honours Co-operative Chemistry*
Honours Co-operative Chemistry (Computational Specialization)
Honours Co-operative Chemistry* (Materials Chemistry Specialization)
Honours Co-operative Chemical Physics (joint with Physics and Astronomy - see Physics and Astronomy)
Honours Co-operative Geochemistry (joint with Earth and Environmental Sciences)
Honours Co-operative Materials and Nanosciences (joint with Physics and Astronomy - see Physics and Astronomy)
Honours Co-operative Medicinal Chemistry*
Minors
Minor in Chemistry
Minor in Biochemistry (see Biology)
Notes to all Honours Chemistry Students
- Students whose major field of study is Chemistry may not take the following courses for credit: CHEM 228, CHEM 266/CHEM 266L, CHEM 267/CHEM 267L.
- The middle digit of most course numbers indicates the subdiscipline within which the course lies:
X0X general interest
X1X inorganic/materials chemistry
X2X analytical chemistry
X3X biological chemistry/biochemistry
X4X computational/theoretical chemistry
X5X physical chemistry
X6X organic chemistry
X7X polymer chemistry
X8X medicinal chemistry
X9X individualized courses (research projects, etc.)
Program Electives
Any 400-level CHEM lecture course may serve as a program elective. Other courses may also qualify as program electives. Consult the Chemistry website or speak with the program academic advisor for the most up-to-date list of program electives.