Glossary of Post-Secondary Terms
February 4, 2021
This is in reference to the first (bachelor’s) degree a student receives, usually in the arts or sciences. The general degree (also called a pass degree) is without a concentration in a particular field.
Honours Degree
This is in reference to the first (bachelor’s) degree a
student receives. The honour program is usually a year longer, requires
a higher standing for admission and for the maintenance of honours
status and the student specializes in a particular field.
Intersession
A break between terms that generally serves as a vacation but in which courses may also be offered.
Lecture
Teaching method in which the teacher or professor presents
information orally to the students who take notes and ask questions.
Major
The subject in which a student wishes to concentrate for an undergraduate degree.
Master’s Degree
Postgraduate degree following the Bachelor’s degree. This
may be only two years, where the master’s stands alone or it may be a
degree attained whilst working toward a PhD. Academic master’s degrees
usually involve preparing a thesis as well as completing taught courses,
whilst a processional master’s degree (e.g. education, management,
communications, ect.) may require directed practical training.
Mature Student
A student who, because he or she has been out of school for a
time, does not have to fulfill the usual admission
requirements. Admission is generally decided on an individual basis and
interested students should contact the university for more information.
Minor
As subject in which the student takes the second greatest concentration of courses.
Part-Time Student
Students who are registered for less than a 60% course load
(less than 18 credit hours in one year) are considered part-time
students.
Plagiarism
To plagiarize is to take ideas or words of another person
and pass them off as one's own. Plagiarism applies to any written work,
in traditional or electronic format, as well as orally or verbally
presented work. Post-secondary institutions take this form of cheating
very seriously and severe punishments may occur.
Prerequisite
Program or course that a student is required to complete
before being permitted to enroll in a more advanced program or courses.
Registrar
A university official concerned with keeping academic
records, approving course selections, and sometimes, counseling. The
registrar’s office is responsible for student admissions, records and
the university timetable.
Scholarship
A financial award to student to help finance their
studies. Awarded on the basis of outstanding academic achievement. A
scholarship may take the for of a waiver for tuition and/or fees.
Semester
Half the academic year usually lasting between 15 and 18 weeks.
Syllabus
An outline of topics covered, and the grading structure for an academic courses.
T.A.
Teaching assistant, a postgraduate student acting as
instructor for and undergraduate course in their field, in return for
some form of financial aid from the university.
Transcripts
A certified copy of a student’s educational record. For
postgraduate applications this will state the date a degree was
conferred, indicate the student’s overall grade point average and list
the course completed, their value in terms of credits and the final
grade attained in each. For students with British qualifications,
certified copies of degree or examination certificates along with a
syllabus for each course from the college university registrar will
suffice.
Tuition
The money the institution charges for instruction and training (does not include the cost of books.
Undergraduate
A student enrolled in a bachelor or associate’s degree
program. An undergraduate program is a study program leading to the
awarding of a bachelor or associate degree.
University
A large postsecondary institution that offers both
undergraduate (bachelor) and postgraduate (master & doctoral) degree
programs.
Voluntary Withdrawal
A student may with to drop or "voluntary withdrawal" from a
course of their choosing. If this withdrawal occurs during the first
two weeks of classes of the semester (also called the registration
revision period), it will not be recorded as a withdrawal and shall not
be recorded on official transcripts or student histories. After the
registration revision period ends students shall be allowed a limited
number of voluntary withdrawals which shall be recorded on official
transcripts and student histories.
*Portions of this document were taken/adapted from the University of Manitoba's 2003-2004 Undergraduate Calendar, & from the 2003 Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada Directory of Canadian Universities.*