14.0.1 Course Selection Notes
- Not all courses listed are offered every year; some are offered every second or third year. For information about course availability, students should consult the department offering the course. The Concordia Timetable is the official list of courses offered in a given academic year and is available online.
- First-year students may not register in senior-level courses except with the consent of the department.
- Enrolment in some courses may be limited to students in particular programs, or restricted for other academic reasons.
- Students working toward a Concordia Arts or Science degree may not count more than 18 credits from courses outside the Faculties of Arts and Science toward their degrees. Courses offered through the Faculty of Education and the Faculty of Management are outside the Faculties of Arts and Science. Faculty information is indicated for each course. For complete information, students should consult the General Academic Requirements for their program.
14.0.2 Course Information
Course sections are listed alphabetically by discipline. Within the sections for the different disciplines, courses are listed in alphanumerical order by course code. Each course listing contains the course’s code, title, credit value, instruction hours, description of the course content and, if applicable, notes, prerequisites, and corequisites.
Course codes are alpha-numeric. The alphabetical code indicates the discipline of study (e.g., BIO for Biology, ENG for English, PSY for Psychology, etc.); the three-digit numerical code is interpreted as follows:
100–199 | junior-level courses, normally taken by first-year students. |
200–399 | senior-level courses open to students with at least second-year standing (18 credits or more). |
400–499 | senior-level courses for students completing Concordia degrees, normally taken in the third or fourth year of undergraduate studies. |
500–599 | master’s degree courses and senior-level courses open only to students admitted to an after-degree program. |
600–699 | master’s degree courses and senior-level courses open only to students with an applicable degree and other required qualifications. |
Credit Value
The credit value indicates the weight of the course used for calculating the Grade Point Average and for meeting degree requirements. Normally, 1.5- and 3-credit courses are completed at the end of one semester and 6-credit courses at the end of the academic year (two semesters).
Instruction Hours
The numbers within the parentheses indicate the average hours of instruction in a week required by that course:
- The first number indicates in-person lecture hours.
- The second number indicates in-person seminar hours (s), or lecture-lab (L) hours.
- The third number indicates in-person laboratory hours.
- The fourth number, if present, indicates online hours.
- The fifth number indicates flexible hours. Flexible hours may be taught as in-person hours for some sections of the course and as online hours for other sections of the course.
- The presence of a forward slash (/) indicates that the lab or seminar does not meet weekly. For example, 3/2 indicates 3 hours held every 2 weeks.
For example, 63 (3-1s-3-0-0) indicates a 63-credit course with 3 hours of in-person lecture, 1 hour of in-person seminar, and 3 hours of in-person lab per week for the full two semesters; similarly 3 (1-0-0-1-1) indicates a 3-credit course with 1 in-person lecture hour, 1 online hour, and 1 hour that, section-depending, may be in-person or online.
[Approved by the General Faculties Council on August 24, 2021]
Prerequisites
Prerequisites are courses that students must have successfully completed before registering in the course. See section 4.2.2 of this Calendar.
Corequisites
Corequisites are courses in which students must register during the same term of study; corequisites may have been successfully completed previous to registration in the course. See section 4.2.2 of this Calendar.