The following has
been re-printed from the University of Colorado Denver, College of
Liberal Arts and Sciences Faculty Guidebook. Portions have been amended
to more accurately address the needs of CU Succeed Gold instructors.
Please
click here to view the required syllabus format.
The CU Succeed Gold Program requires
instructors to provide detailed course information on the first day of class
through a course syllabus. Students who do not attend the first day of
class must receive the course syllabus on their first day of attendance.
While not a legal contract, the course syllabus contains important information
necessary for students to adequately assess the academic and procedural
suitability of the course and make a decision to stay in the course or drop
it. It
is assumed that students registered in a course after the census date have
agreed to policies stated on the course syllabus.
Faculty are encouraged to use the first class meeting to
thoroughly discuss the course objectives, content, grading policies and
classroom policies. Clarification of course policies at the beginning of
the semester can eliminate student problems later in the semester. Each
course syllabus is to be on file with the appropriate Office
of Extended Studies or Office of Continuing Education within the first week of classes.
NOTE: It is required that an updated syllabus be submitted every term the course is offered.
A course
syllabus for the CU Succeed Gold Program
should contain the following information:
Faculty and General Course
Information
-
course (dept) prefix, number, title and semester
-
meeting pattern
-
instructor's name, office location
-
instructor's office phone and e-mail address (optional but
encouraged)
-
instructor's office hours and appointment procedures
-
registration deadlines, census date - explanation of
registration and add/drop procedures
Course
Specific Information (not
in prioritized order, and not all applicable)
-
goals and objective of the course - expected course outcomes
-
pedagogies selected for class - lecture, group discussion,
papers, projects, etc.
-
expected student effort - hours per week outside of class
-
required and optional text books and other course materials
-
course prerequisites - cannot differ from prerequisites in
UC Denver Catalog; faculty encouraged to use 'working knowledge'
approach to prerequisites; and courses that administratively drop
students for failure to meet course prerequisites must contain
this information on syllabus
-
schedule of topics, assignments and
examinations - does not have to be a day-to-day accounting of
activity in the classroom, rather an outline to make students
aware of the course's topics and general assignment/exam
load
-
GRADING
POLICIES AND PROCEDURES (Method of Evaluation) - detailed information so
that student can calculate grade, including: weighting or
percentage for every graded assignment; attendance and
participation; plus/minus grading, if applicable; extra credit - available to all students, no grade penalty
for participating or not participating, etc.; individual vs. group
efforts on projects and take-home assignments; late assignments -
what penalty, if any, is imposed
College and
Campus Policies (suggested
language for the syllabus is given)
-
UC Denver/HIGH
SCHOOL ACADEMIC HONOR CODE: Students
are to submit only their own work for evaluation, to acknowledge the work
and conclusions of others, and to do nothing that would provide an unfair
advantage in their academic efforts. Students who fail to comply with
the UC Denver Academic Honor Code are subject to disciplinary action.
Frequently
Encountered Situations
-
The large number of items to be addressed requires
a very long course syllabus. The days of the one-page, vague
syllabus are gone. Students need detailed information to evaluate
suitability of course policies. Detailed policies and expectations
at the beginning of the semester reduce ad hoc faculty decisions
and promote good student-faculty communication. A 2-4 page
syllabus is sufficient to meet the requirements outlined above.
-
Students often inquire about partial credit on
examinations. Faculty are encouraged to utilize multiple
methods to evaluate student performance, some of which may lend
themselves to partial credit. Faculty discretion in partial credit
is assumed and details of partial credit grading are not required on the
course syllabus. Explaining expected use of partial credit is
helpful to students.
-
Student misses the first class period where
details of the syllabus are covered. It is the instructor's
responsibility to provide a hard copy course syllabus to each student
independent of the student's first day in class and independent of
syllabus availability on Internet. For students who miss scheduled
lectures, it is their responsibility to obtain course notes from other
students and, if necessary, seek clarification of policies outside
normal lecture time.
-
Students often inquire about expected range of
course grades. While not required, faculty can relieve a lot
of student tension by publishing the expected/historical course GPA,
range of grades, or percentage of individual letter grades.