I depends on the institution and credit load. For example, a three credit course means you must be in class for three hours per week. If the school operates on a two semester academic year, they may break it down to one of the following ways. Three times a week for approximately one hour each day, twice a week for an hour and a half, or once a week for three hours. However, today its more difficult to determine because of telecourses, web-enhanced courses, and online courses. You really have to check with the institution and inquire about how they schedule their classes.
It depends on the college. Most colleges are on a semester basis, where a semester... and therefore a class... is a little over four months. Some colleges are on a "trimester" basis, where each class is about 3 months long.
For college and universities that operate on the regular two semester academic year, one credit equals 16hrs of class contact time.For college and universities that operate on the regular two semester academic year, one credit equals 16hrs of class contact time.For college and universities that operate on the regular two semester academic year, one credit equals 16hrs of class contact time.For college and universities that operate on the regular two semester academic year, one credit equals 16hrs of class contact time.For college and universities that operate on the regular two semester academic year, one credit equals 16hrs of class contact time.For college and universities that operate on the regular two semester academic year, one credit equals 16hrs of class contact time.
It's not the amount of days that determines whether a student is full-time or not. It's the number of credits they are enrolled for each semester. For colleges and universities that operate on a regular two semester academic year, the minimum amount of credits to be considered full-time is, 12 credits.
A short semester offers classes in 4 or 8 week segments and meets for a longer time frame
For colleges and universities that operate on a semester system, one credit requires 16 hours of class contact time for the semester.
May would be considered the end of the Spring semester. If the class began in very late May, then I would think it would be considered a summer semester.
Usually 16 weeks not including holidays
In EMT class you can only miss 3 days before you have the choice to start next semester or get kicked out.
Maybe you mean college credits? You can earn one college credit for a class that meets one hour each week for a semester, which is usually 16-18 weeks. So in order to earn 6 college credits, you would attend class 6 hours a week for a semester.
I am not clear if you are asking about a college math class or high school math class. If it is college you take it for one semester. Some math classes are divided into two parts and you take one the first semester and then the second half the next semester. If this is high school it could be for the entire year.
1.0 or 1.5 unit college physical education courses = 2.5 high school credits; 3-5 unit non-degree applicable (NDA) college coursework = 5 high school credits; 3-5 unit degree applicable (UC/CSU transferable) college coursework = 10 high school credits.
It depends on whether the school operate on a regular two semester, quarter semester, or tri-semester, academic year. Typically, a semester in a two semester school, runs 14 to 16 weeks. It just depends on how they arrange the required class contact hours.