next up previous contents
Next: Ordinary Degrees Up: UG3 Handbook Previous: Staff   Contents

Degrees and Degree Requirements

See http://www.inf.ed.ac.uk/teaching/years/ug3/degrees.html.

It is your responsibility to make sure that your course selection is correct. By the end of week 1 of semester 1 you are required to submit an initial choice of the courses you intend to take during the year. If you change any choice, it is your responsibility to notify the ITO. In mid January, your choices will become final, and will be used by Registry to timetable your exams. (You will be reminded near the time.) Note that if your Director of Studies is not in Informatics, you will have to ask them to change your courses; the ITO can only act on behalf of Informatics DoSes. The choice of courses is stored on WISARD, which you can access through the Edinburgh Student Portal.

Some timetable clashes for combined honours students are unavoidable, thereby restricting choice somewhat: note that the University will not permit students to take courses that clash in the timetable.

Although the regulations permit some flexibility, there may be cases where a student has a good reason to want to take a curriculum outwith the regulations (for example, a single honours student wishing to take a 20 point outside course). In this case, permission should be sought from the Director of Teaching. Such permission will not necessarily be granted, and is formally at the discretion of the Head of College. A special case mentioned in the regulations is a third-year student wishing to take one course at Level 10, for example as preparation for a fourth-year project in a particular area. This also requires permission from Head of Teaching.

There are also three major projects, combinations of which are compulsory for most degrees. The System Design Project (SDP) is a group project; it is a double weight course, carrying 20 credit points. The CS/SE Individual Project (IP) is a single course, carrying 10 credit points. The AI Large Practical (AILP) is a single course, carrying 10 credit points.

Finally, there is a 10 credit point course on Professional Issues (PI), which is compulsory for fully accredited degrees.



Subsections
next up previous contents
Next: Ordinary Degrees Up: UG3 Handbook Previous: Staff   Contents
Perdita Stevens 2007-01-16