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- A course is a course, of course, except when it is a subject. At MIT course numbers and abbreviations refer to courses of study leading to specific academic degrees and, by extension, to the departments or programs offering those degrees. For example, Course 6 refers to the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science.
catalog.mit.edu/subjects/
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At MIT course numbers and abbreviations refer to courses of study leading to specific academic degrees and, by extension, to the departments or programs offering those degrees. For example, Course 6 refers to the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science.
- 18.01A
18.01A - Subjects - MIT Course Catalog
- 18.02A
18.02A - Subjects - MIT Course Catalog
- 11.002[J]
11.002[J] - Subjects - MIT Course Catalog
- Online Subject Listing and Schedule
Online Subject Listing and Schedule - Subjects - MIT Course...
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Search - Subjects - MIT Course Catalog
- Course 21L Literature
The subjects listed below are arranged in three graduated...
- Course 18 Mathematics
18.063 Matrix Calculus for Machine Learning and Beyond (New)...
- Course 8 Physics
For Course 8 students participating in off-campus...
- 18.01A
It is also acceptable to add the letter A to a second version of a subject, retaining a standard number for the similar subject. (Examples: 4.021 and 4.10A, 18.310 and 18.310A.) The preferred method of handling these situations is to use sequential numbers (e.g., 7.012, 7.013, 7.014; 8.333, 8.334). L.
- What You Need to Know
- Subject Levels
- Credit
The Subject Listing & Scheduleis your source for information on classes offered at MIT. In addition to subject descriptions, listings include the current schedule, subject level, units, and pre- and corequisites.
U or G indicates undergraduate or graduate level subjects. 1. Undergraduate students — you will not receive graduate credit for G level subjects. Your transcript will always reflect U-level credit. 2. Graduate students — you will receive N-level credit for any undergraduate subjects. N-level subjects cannot be used to fulfill your graduate degree r...
One MIT unit is approximately equal to 14 hours of work per term. The Subject Listing displays units for each subject as a series of three numbers (e.g., 3-2-7). The numbers added together (3+2+7) equal the total credit for the subject (12). In order, the three numbers represent: 1. units assigned for lectures and recitations. 2. units assigned to ...
MIT Subject Listing & ScheduleSymbol Definitions. Level. Undergraduate subject. Graduate subject. Term. Fall IAP Spring Summer. Click these buttons to add a scheduled subject to your selection. (only one will show next to the schedule information, depending on the term)
Subject numbering. Starting with fall 2022, EECS will be using new numbers for almost all of its subjects. This page explains the new system and the reasons for the change, and answers some common questions.
At MIT, majors are conventionally called courses, and they’re numbered rather than named; meanwhile, our credits are called units and they’re counted differently than at most other universities.
Advanced Search. Press "Clear" between searches. Enter a keyword, phrase, subject number, Course number, professor's last name, or prereq/coreq. with the exact phrase with all of the words. Professor (last) name Prereq/Coreq Whole words only. For subjects offered in term. Fall IAP Spring Summer Any term. Classes offered and scheduled Fall 2024 only