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19 Courses Matching “kor”
19 Code & Title Matches
College of Liberal Arts
Modern Languages
- Kor 111: Intensive Elementary Korean I
- Kor 112: Intensive Elementary Korean II
- Kor 198: Elementary Korean Study Abroad
- Kor 199: Special Topics in Korean
- Kor 211: Intensive Intermediate Korean I
- Kor 212: Intensive Intermediate Korean II
- Kor 298: Intermediate Korean Study Abroad
- Kor 299: Special Topics in Korean
- Kor 301: Advanced Korean I
- Kor 302: Advanced Korean II
- Kor 398: Upper-Level Korean Study Abroad
- Kor 399: Special Topics in Korean
- Kor 401: Conversation and Composition I
- Kor 402: Conversation and Composition II
Art & Art History
Croft Inst for International Studies
Sociology & Anthropology
No Full-text Matches
Course Numbering System
Courses are described by a subject prefix (e.g., Accy for Accountancy) followed by a three-digit number (complete listing of course prefixes). This constitutes the official designation of the course for the purposes of registration and official records. The official course title also appears following the course number, along with a brief description of the course. The number of semester hours of credit for the course and information about pre- or corequisites is also provided. The following numbering system determines the level of the course and availability to students.
Course Level | Description |
---|---|
1-99 | Courses that accrue no credit toward a degree |
100-299 | Lower-division courses; open to all students for undergraduate credit |
300-499 | Upper-division or advanced courses; open as undergraduate credit to students who are classified as sophomore or higher, or by permission of the department offering the course |
500-599 | Courses open as graduate credit to graduate students and open as undergraduate upper-division credit to undergraduate students who are classified as juniors or seniors |
600-799 | Courses open to graduate students |
Prerequisites are listed for some courses. A student may not take a course unless these prerequisites have been met. In a continuous course sequence (such as Writ 101, 102 or Math 261, 262, 263, 264) the prior courses are prerequisite to the subsequent courses unless otherwise stated. Thus, a student who has failed one semester of a continuous course sequence may not take a subsequent course in that sequence until the failed course has been passed. In the case of modern or ancient language sequences (such as Span 101, 102, 201, 202), a student may begin at any level but then must take any subsequent courses in order. If a corequisite course is listed, this course must be taken during the same semester as the first course.