19 Tex. Admin. Code § 4.6 - Minimum Length of Courses and Limitation on the Amount of Credit that a Student May Earn in a Given Time Period
(a)
Traditionally-delivered three-semester-credit-hour courses should contain 15
weeks of instruction (45 contact hours) plus a week for final examinations so
that such a course contains 45 to 48 contact hours depending on whether there
is a final exam.
(b) Every college
course is assumed to involve a significant amount of non-contact hour time for
out-of-class student learning and reflection. To ensure the quality of student
learning, institutions should not allow students to carry more courses in any
term (that is, regular or shortened semester), which would allow them to earn
more than one semester credit hour per week over the course of the term. For
example, in a five and a half week summer term, students should not generally
be allowed to enroll for more than six semester credit hours.
(c) Institutions should have a formal written
policy for addressing any exceptions to subsection (b) of this
section.
(d) Courses delivered in
shortened semesters are expected to have the same number of contact hours and
the same requirement for out-of-class learning as courses taught in a normal
semester.
(e) Institutions may
offer a course in a non-traditional way (for example, over the internet, or
through a shortened, intensive format) that does not meet these contact hour
requirements, if the course has been reviewed and approved through a formal,
institutional faculty review process that evaluates the course and its learning
outcomes and determines that the course does, in fact, have equivalent learning
outcomes to an equivalent, traditionally delivered course.
Notes
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