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Texas
Tech University is in compliance with Comprehensive Standard
3.4.6.
Courses at Texas Tech University are given
a four-letter prefix and a four-digit numeric code. The
four-letter prefix identifies the program in which the course is
housed. The first digit of the numeric code is the course level,
the second is the amount of credit the course carries, and the
last two digits are an identifier that locates the course within
the departmental or college listings. For example, HIST 1300 is
a freshman-level history course that carries three semester
hours of credit. Its departmental identifier is 00. (This system
is described in the Texas Tech University Catalog on p. 12.
accessible on line at
http://www.depts.ttu.edu/officialpublications/catalog/Explain.html
)
The general policy for determining the
amount of credit for courses is based on student contact hours
during a 15-week semester (not counting final exam week). This
is a standard system that is used throughout the United States
by institutions on the semester system, and it is recognized by
the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board. In this system,
a one credit course requires 15 hours of lecture contact during
a semester, and a three credit hour course requires 45 hours of
lecture contact during the semester. Laboratory contact is
valued at half the lecture contact so that 30 hours of
laboratory contact in a 15-week semester earns one semester hour
of credit. For courses that have both lecture and laboratory
sessions, semester credit hours are divided. For example, a
course with 30 hours of lecture contact and 30 hours of
laboratory contact during the semester earns 3 semester hours of
credit, and one that has 45 hours of lecture and 30 hours of
laboratory would earn four semester credit hours.
Seminar courses,
internships, field classes, and other courses that do not fit
the lecture/ laboratory format must offer student-instructor
contact or a student time commitment equivalent to the 15
contact hours = one credit standard. The same standard applies
to courses that are offered through distance education. In
addition, distance education courses must be approved by the
Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board, which monitors all
proposals to insure they meet the same content and credit hour
equivalents as course taught on campus for comparable credit.
Courses at the 1000 and 2000 level are
considered to be lower-division and suitable for freshman or
sophomore students. Generally, they do not have a prerequisite
or the prerequisite is the beginning semester for the second
course in a sequence. Many times they satisfy core curriculum
requirements or serve as prerequisites for upper-division
courses. Upper-division courses, generally taken by junior or
senior students, are designated 3000 or 4000 and usually carry a
prerequisite or assume some prior knowledge of the subject
matter. They demand a more sophisticated level of knowledge and
interpretation of the subject than do lower-division courses.
Lower-division courses are often taught in large sections with
objective examinations and little written work. Upper-division
classes are less likely to be large and may require more
reading, written work such as a term paper or essay, and have
higher expectations that students will exercise independent
thought and interpretation with respect to the information
covered in the syllabus. As appropriate for the course subject
matter, examinations may be essay, short-answer,
identifications, or some other subjective format in which
students can provide their own interpretations of the material
over which they are tested.
Graduate courses are designated 5000, 6000,
or 7000. Most organized graduate courses carry the 5000
designation. It is expected that graduate courses are advanced
and require of students an ability to conduct sophisticated
analyses of the subject material. They generally involve reading
and interpretation of timely professional literature, often from
professional journals, and they generally require students to
demonstrate through written work, experiment, or projects that
they have mastered the course content. 6000 courses are
generally Master’s thesis or independent research, and 7000
numbers are assigned for doctoral dissertation or independent
doctoral-level research. Some departments differentiate among
graduate courses, placing all organized Master’s-level courses
in the 5000 level and doctoral level courses at the 7000 level.
Advanced courses in the Law School carry a 6000 number.
New courses must be approved in the
originating department or program, at the college level, and by
the Academic Council (provost- level) before they may be added
to the university course list. The new course review process is
rigorous and insures that new courses meet the requirements for
the level at which they are taught and that they meet the
semester credit hour standards.
All faculty are required to have students
evaluate their courses at least once during the year and many
departments require evaluation of all courses. Tenure
probationary faculty are to conduct student evaluations of all
classes they teach. These evaluations, along with peer review
and informal monitoring help to assure that both the content and
teaching of courses are appropriate for the level and semester
credit hour designation they carry. (For guidelines on faculty
performance evaluation, see O. P. 32.32, Performance Evaluation
of Faculty
http://www.depts.ttu.edu/opmanual/OP32.32.html). In
addition, Texas state law mandates that all tenured faculty
undergo a comprehensive performance evaluation at least once
every six years. The CPE policy is in O.P. 32.31, at
http://www.depts.ttu.edu/opmanual/OP32.31.html. Teaching
performance is a component of this process.
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