A syllabus is a contract between you and the professor. The archive gives you the power to read that contract before you sign.
Are you a looking for upcoming course details, or an alumnus needing documents for credit transfer?
UTM courses typically feature a 5 in their suffix (e.g., MAT135H5 ). This ensures you do not accidentally download a syllabus from the St. George (UTSG) or Scarborough (UTSC) campuses. Utm Syllabus Archive
Are you ready for next semester? We know registration can be stressful, but there is a tool that makes it easier: The .
UTM distributes its historical course outlines across a few platforms depending on the academic department and the year the course was taught. 1. The Office of the Registrar Course Outline Archive A syllabus is a contract between you and the professor
Email the or Departmental Administrator .
From a faculty and administrative perspective, the archive functions as the "institutional memory" of the university. It documents the evolution of departments and the shifting priorities of various disciplines. When programs undergo or professional accreditation processes, the syllabus archive provides the necessary evidence that the curriculum meets specific rigorous standards. It ensures that even as professors retire or move on, the foundational knowledge of a course is preserved and can be built upon by successors. Transfer Credits and Lifelong Learning UTM courses typically feature a 5 in their suffix (e
The UTM Syllabus Archive is a centralized digital repository (often hosted via the UTM Library or the Office of the Registrar) that stores historical and current course syllabi for all disciplines taught at the Mississauga campus. Unlike the live course pages on Quercus (which are only visible to enrolled students), the archive provides a where prospective students, current students, and external reviewers can view the official outlines of courses.
[Course Code & Title] ├── Evaluation Scheme (Assignments, Midterms, Finals) ├── Weekly Lecture & Reading Schedule ├── Required Textbooks & Software └── Departmental & Accessibility Policies
The is one of the most underutilized assets on campus. Too many students wait until the first day of class to see a syllabus, only to realize the course requires five group presentations or a 10-page research paper during midterm season.