Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Standard semester load at some schools is 5 courses, and at other schools is 4 courses. Usually translates to 120 credits to graduate (5 course schools, 15 credits a semester) or 128 credits (4 course schools, 16 per semester).
Suffice to say, 4-course schools are more likely to be private and to have some prestige. It is also true that 5 courses at the ole state school is generally harder than 4 courses at the “prestigious” SLAC.
This is the correct answer.
Anonymous wrote:Standard semester load at some schools is 5 courses, and at other schools is 4 courses. Usually translates to 120 credits to graduate (5 course schools, 15 credits a semester) or 128 credits (4 course schools, 16 per semester).
Suffice to say, 4-course schools are more likely to be private and to have some prestige. It is also true that 5 courses at the ole state school is generally harder than 4 courses at the “prestigious” SLAC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depends on the school. At a lot of state schools, where a class is 3 credits, often 5, if they're not taking as many lab courses. At private schools on the semester system, it's often 4 (sometimes schools also limit how many credits first-semester freshman can take). I'm actually really curious about the difference in semester courseloads at public and private schools - public schools often have way more requirements for the major and gen-eds - and graduates of state schools will end up taking a handful more classes than their private school counterparts.
At our DC's private school you would need 5 (3 credit) courses per semester to be on target to graduate (less if someone had AP credit coming in). They have to take at least 12 credits (4 courses) in a semester to be considered full time and can technically take up to 20 credits in a semester but special permission is required for 18 credits or above. So - most kids take five 3 credit courses and some take an additional lower credit course (1 credit or 2 credit) - these lower credit courses include things like the lab course that goes with your science course or a (non-lab) mini course that only meets an hour a week.
My private college (back in the day) was pretty much the same - although I think if you took 5 classes each semester, you could get away with only 4 courses the last semester.
Anonymous wrote:Depends on the school. At a lot of state schools, where a class is 3 credits, often 5, if they're not taking as many lab courses. At private schools on the semester system, it's often 4 (sometimes schools also limit how many credits first-semester freshman can take). I'm actually really curious about the difference in semester courseloads at public and private schools - public schools often have way more requirements for the major and gen-eds - and graduates of state schools will end up taking a handful more classes than their private school counterparts.
Anonymous wrote:OP: Thanks. It's for an Econ major at a SLAC on the semester system.
Anonymous wrote:It also depends on the major. I have a potential music major. Programs that we've looked at have lots of 1 credit classes like their primary and secondary instrument or ensembles, so kids are taking 6 or 7 or 8 classes to get to a normal credit load of 15 or 16 credits.