colleges,  courses,  transfer credits

a proactive fan wants out early

Hey Aska,

I stumbled upon your website while I was googling for information about U of T and may I just say that this website reeks of awesomeness? It has really helped me a lot in gaining a better insight to life at U of T. I have two questions that I hope you would be able to answer. I’ve tried searching this website for the information I need, but I can’t seem to find them – so forgive me if you’ve answered similar questions before!

I was looking through the courses offered by U of T and realised that there are some courses that I am interested in that are offered by specific colleges, such as Woodsworth, Trinity or Victoria. Is it possible for me to take up a course that is not offered by my college?

I understand that 20 credits will lead up to a degree. I am allowed to
transfer 2.5 credits from high school. Does that mean that I only need totake up 17.5 credits? I have a friend who’s studying at U of T and she’s
graduating next summer. She’s been studying at U of T for less than 4 yearsthough. How does that work? Is it possible to take up maximum credits for each academic year and then probably stay on for one summer to take up theextra 2 credits? Would that save me one academic year?

Thanks a lot!!

Xin

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Hey man, thanks for the kudos. It’s nice to be appreciated.

I’m gonna break down your question into three parts.

a) As long as you fulfill the pre-requisites, any student can take any of the “College”-sponsored courses. That means that you don’t have to be an Innis student to take a UC class, and you don’t have to be wearing a Trinity robe to register in a New College class. Colleges sponsor and promote certain programs of study, but what college you are enrolled in does not affect any class you can take. So go forth!

b) If you have 2.5 accepted transfer credits from high school (through IB or CEGEP or however you managed to swing that), then yes, you will only need to take 17.5 credits to graduate from U of T PROVIDED THAT the Transfer Credit office (who are notoriously stingy with transfer credits) approves your classes.

c) Your friend must’ve drank a whole lot of Rockstar Energy Drinks to get through that fast through U of T. You can take a maximum of 2.5 credits during summer school, and a maximum of six full year credits during the school year – which at a rate of 8.5 credits per year would allow you to graduate at a clip of just under three years. However, you would go NUTS! Insane! And trust me, delaying your university experience a little longer is much more preferable than going insane and graduating early. So think about that!

xoxo, Askastudent

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