Among them, public compulsory courses account for 45 credits, professional compulsory courses account for 50-75 credits, elective courses account for 35-60 credits, graduation thesis (design) accounts for 8 credits, and learning practice accounts for 65,438+0-2 credits (for details, please refer to the student handbook issued by the school, which will explain the credits, grade points and graduation in detail).
University credit extension:
1. What is credit?
Credit is a unit of points obtained by successfully completing a course, which is used to indicate the amount of learning required for students to obtain certificates, diplomas or reach a certain level.
Different countries have different regulations on the learning amount of credit representatives. For example, in some states in the United States, credits are generally calculated in Carnegie units, and each unit represents at least 1 20 hours of classroom teaching in the school year.
Canada can get 1 credit for successfully completing the minimum10 class hours, and 1/2 credit for completing the minimum 55 class hours. According to the new senior high school curriculum standards of the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, and Sports of Japan, 1 class hour or a class is 50 minutes, and 35 class hours of teaching is 1 credit.
Credits are units used to calculate students' academic performance. One credit is approximately equivalent to 1 academic hour of students in the classroom or laboratory.
The amount of homework for a continuous semester does not include the amount of extracurricular discussions and exchanges between students and teachers or classmates, the amount of preparation for exams, and other academic assignments related to the course but not directly related to the course teaching.
This definition of credit was put forward by the Carnegie Foundation for the Promotion of Teaching in the United States and has been widely recognized. Using credits to measure students' learning volume is the credit system, also known as the credit accumulation system.
It calculates students' learning volume in units of credits, and holds that students must reach a certain minimum academic weight in order to obtain a degree, such as a bachelor's degree, a master's degree or a doctor's degree.
This academic weight represents the number of courses taken by students. The credit system of 1894 originated in America. Harvard University in the United States first adopted the credit system, and Harvard Medical College established the credit system on the basis of elective system. By the beginning of the 20th century, most colleges and universities in the United States had successively implemented the credit system.
Second, what is the credit system?
The credit system is a curriculum management system that calculates students' learning volume in units of credits, and the completion of the prescribed lower limit credits is the basic condition for students to obtain graduation qualifications. It records the growth experience and development degree of students in the corresponding curriculum field through credits in the form of quantitative scores.