2024-2025 Student Handbook
Table 2 (Summer Courses)
Out-of-Class Work per Week, Incl. Exam Week
Total Classroom Time per Week (12 Weeks)
Credits
Examination
Total
(13 Weeks)
2600 minutes
1
60 minutes
60 minutes
140 minutes
(43.3 hours)
5200 minutes
2
120 minutes
120 minutes
280 minutes
(86.7 hours)
7800 minutes
3
180 minutes
180 minutes
420 minutes
(130 hours)
10340 minutes
4
240 minutes
180 minutes
560 minutes
(172.3 hours)
If a summer class is scheduled to meet for fewer than 12 weeks (not including an examination week), it must: meet for a total of no less than 715 minutes per credit; require a total of no less than 1680 minutes per credit of out-of-class student work over the period of time for which it is actually scheduled; and require a final examination of 60 minutes per credit, but not exceeding three total hours, entailing no less than 140 minutes per credit of out-of-class preparation time, or assessments/projects entailing an equivalent amount of work. If a summer class does not have a final examination scheduled during examination period, students in the class must be required to complete other assessments or projects sufficient to ensure that the absence of the examination does not cause the total amount of work required for the course to fall below 2600 minutes per credit, or 10340 total minutes for a 4-credit course.
Any faculty member who misses or cancels a regularly scheduled class session must schedule a make up class and/or assign an equivalent amount of out-of-class work.
(iii) Winter session
The winter session, also known as “intersession,” is a one week term with an ex amination, paper, or project. Winter session courses ordinarily meet for 750 minutes per credit during the week. Students are expected to spend a minimum of 30 hours per credit on out-of-class work during the week, or an equivalent number of hours over a longer period of time if a paper or project is due on a date after the end of the winter session.
(iv) Special sessions
Any law programs (e.g., overseas law programs) offered for academic credit by the Law School that are not scheduled to correspond to a standard fall, spring, summer, or winter session will be designed to ensure an allocation of weekly classroom time and out-of-classroom work sufficient to satisfy the definition of a credit hour as set forth above.
(b) Out-of-class Student Work in Courses that Involve Classroom or Direct Faculty Instruction:
Out-of-classroom work within the definition of a credit hour may include, but is not limited to: reading assignments; case briefing; study groups and review sessions; written assignments other than examinations (including preparatory memos, journals, and reflections on readings or experience); solving problem sets; participating in out-of-class simulations and role-playing exercises; research assignments; online assessments; posting to an online discussion board; court or other observations; conferences with the instructor, academic support instructors or teaching assistants; and other work that assists in comprehension of course content such as outlining and studying for examinations.
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