Board Policy 301.5.5 Equivalent Course Identification and Numbering

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Board Policy 301.5.5
Equivalent Course Identification and Numbering
Approved November 2007
Courses determined to be equivalent shall be
accepted as if the courses had been taken at the
receiving campus…. The commissioner, after
appropriate consultation within the system,
shall assign each equivalent course a common
course prefix, number and name.
Board Policy 301.5
Transfer of Credits; MUS & Community Colleges
All college level courses from regionally
accredited institutions of higher education will
be received and applied by all campuses of the
Montana university system (MUS), and by the
community colleges, towards the free elective
requirements of the associate and baccalaureate
degrees.
Checking CCN matrices for equivalence
OCHE course lookup tables
HSTR 101 Western Civilization I
X
X
X
HSTR 103 Honors Western Civilization I
X
X
X
X
X
HSTR 102 Western Civilization II
X
X
X
HSTR 104 Honors Western Civilization II
X
HSTR 130 Latin American History
X
HSTR 135 Modern Middle East
X
HSTR 140 Modern Asia
X
HSTR 145 History of Japan
X
HSTR 160 Modern World History
X
HSTR 191 Special Topics
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
HSTR 192 Independent Study
X
HSTR 198 Coop Education/Internship
X
HSTR 201 The 20th Century World I
X
HSTR 202 The 20th Century World II
X
HSTR 205 Science, Technology, and Risk
X
HSTR 207 Sci Tech in World History
X
HSTR 208 Sci, Envir Tch, Soc: Com Exp
X
HSTR 220 Intro to Research Methods
X
HSTR 230 Colonial Latin America
X
X
X
6. Why can’t we continue to cross-list courses using
multiple prefixes (rubrics)?
Cross-listing of courses serves many purposes on individual campuses, but it
cannot be deployed effectively in a common-course numbering
environment—its very assumptions run counter to the principles underlying
the CCN project. Cross listing basically means giving the same course multiple
labels for the purpose of communicating what academic programs make use
of it and count it toward their major requirements. By contrast, CCN operates
on the dictum that a single course can have one and only one label—
otherwise different users of the system have no way of knowing whether a
course has other equivalents listed with different prefixes, numbers, or titles.
Cross-listing may still be used by campuses as a locally useful strategy to show
how different campus entities make use of a single course. But because every
campus’s cross-listing differs, attempting to build cross-listing into the
systemwide database of courses would inevitably destroy the usefulness of
the database.
Pilot using 800-level to designate cross-listing
11 of 25 courses taught this fall semester (e.g.,
The Silk Road; ANTY 141, HSTR 841, CSWA 841)
Total enrollment for courses = 278; in 2007/8 =
258
Sections labeled with 800: 8 equivalent or
greater to last time offered using former
department rubric, 6 enrolled fewer students.
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