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Monday
Nov052007

How To Register For Classes

This week among all the craziness that's going on, everyone at LMU has started receiving reminders about one particularly dreadful thing: class registration. Don't worry, we're here to help make sure you get the best schedule possible. Here's a walk-through of everything registration: organizing your schedule to a tee, getting into those quick-filling classes and avoiding a professor from hell.

The Prep:

 

Before getting started, you need to gather all of the information you will need, including but not limited to:

 


  • Your current class report. At LMU, these go by the euphemism "CAPP Report." It's the thing that reminds you which classes you have (and sometimes haven't) taken.

  • Class bulletin. You know, the thing with the information on what you need to complete your major.

  • Any past roadmaps you've made for yourself. You might have a "timeline" of sorts with your whole 4/5-year plan. For those of us who are over-organized, this might be in the form of an Excel spreadsheet. For me, I just use paper.

  • A few hours of peace and quiet. The sooner you get started, the sooner it gets done...

 

 

The Schedule:

 

 


  • Write down the classes remaining to be taken for your major(s) and minor(s). This includes all of them. Course numbers will do (e.g. "CS 101").

  • Figure out which classes will be offered next term and give priority to prerequisites. Some majors require classes to be taken in a certain sequence. Taking prerequisites early will obviously make this process more enjoyable in the future.

  • Look up timing for finals week. Most schools make the schedule for finals week available during registration. Give a scan of the possible finals timing and nix any classes that necessitate an unfavorable final. Usually, people prefer to avoid finals that are early in the morning or ones that force you to stick around campus until the very last day of finals week. We’ll be adjusting our schedules to accommodate the annual film school party.

  • Record the times for all of the available sections for each class. Chris prefers using iCal. Scott can do it in his head. I use pencil and paper. You want a system that will easily highlight timing conflicts between different class sections. Then, it’s kind of like Sudoku or a Jigsaw puzzle. Use trial and error to pull together a clean schedule. Make it neat – your workstudy employer might want a copy to plan hours for the next semester.

  • Don’t set yourself up for disaster. Make sure there’s physically enough time for you to have lunch or walk from one class to the next (pull up a campus map). If you’re not an early-bird, don’t schedule something too early (obvious enough) but by the same token, a late-Thursday-night class might be just as tempting to cut.

  • Play favorites. You're not always going to get your top choice, so save room for a few backups.

  • Double-check the professors. Check RateMyProfessor.com and PickAProf which is even more reliable (as Rosario mentioned a while ago). Bear in mind that word of mouth will always be more reliable. Just hang out in your college for a week and talk to some fellow students. The answers will be obvious.

 

 

 

 

The Business:


Let's face it, you're not going to get every class you're hoping for, but you can do damage control beforehand.


  • First, make sure you have no “holds” on your registration. All this planning will go down the tubes if you still have holds on your account. Sometimes, this means meeting with advisors or paying the rest of last semester’s tuition.

  • Figure out your exact registration time. Depending on how your school does registration, you might need to wake up early or stay up late. Bear in mind that there are probably hundreds of other students with your exact registration time. You're competing with them -- so be ready to go exactly on time.

  • Be ready to sign up for the maximum number of classes. You want as much flexibility as possible going into the next term, so take as many classes as your school allows – a larger load than you can even handle. The week before the final add/drop date can serve as a grace period to test your teachers and timing. You can whittle down your schedule to the best classes. Make sure you've got the add/drop days ingrained in your brain.

  • Plan ahead. If you're going to try to take a class that's likely to fill up quickly, get creative. Have someone with an earlier registration date hold your spot in the class. Bear in mind that Honors students, atheletes and people with disabilities will be able to register even earlier than Seniors or your friends with a high number of credit hours. Or, just email the teacher right off the bat - they can usually get you in earlier, rather than later.

  • Don't forget the course numbers. For popular classes, seconds matter. Course registration numbers will be the fastest way to sign up for classes on D-Day. Jot down all of the registration numbers for your ideal schedule so that when it's time to register, all you have to do is punch in all the numbers and hope for the best.

 

 

Registration Day:

 

 


  • Be prepared for the worst. Remember: you're better off saving a spot in a class that wasn't your first choice than leaving yourself with an empty slot and no options later.

  • Set an alarm. Give yourself enough time to pull up your schedule and the registration webpage.

  • Good luck.

 

 

The Aftermath:

 

 


  • If you didn't get into the class you wanted, there's still hope. Get buddy-buddy with the professor. Ask them to open up a slot for you. Show up to the class anyway -- most professors will have a harder time turning you down in person than over email. Alternatively, watch the class online like a hawk to see if anyone drops. Check in the wee hours of the morning. Pray.

  • Keep the relevant paperwork. Some of this stuff will come in handy come next semester. There are a few steps you can bypass if you keep the planning materials you used. I just scanned in my sheet and GMailed it to myself.

 

What are your class registration mantras?

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Reader Comments (13)

The best two things I've done throughout my time are to try to register early and to check what the time before you filled up.

Especially for the first session of the day the system needs to be tested to make sure it works. And there's almost no way you can test it without making students able to register. I've gotten to go half an hour early before.

Also, checking what filled up in the time right before yours allows you to skip over those classes and to focus on what is still open. Some people check after every session, but it really doesn't matter until that session right before yours.

November 5 | Unregistered CommenterZach

The one biggest thing I would do aside from examining the entire course catalog for interesting classes and signing up early, was sign up for at least one more class than I needed. That trick allowed me to back out of any class that looked like trouble without worrying about being able to get another one I needed.

Big help when I signed up for the Steven Spielberg class, and learned about a 15 page paper plus exams where you have to learn the "key grip" and "best boy" on every movie he ever made. At least I stayed around till the end of the first class. About a third of the class left before it was over. But no worries, it was an easy drop.

November 6 | Unregistered CommenterAaron

Great tips. Really helped me out.

November 8 | Unregistered Commenterrare hero

[...] How to Register for Classes Hack College provides some helpful tips on how to get your ideal class schedule. [...]

Good stuff, I registered before I saw this, but this is my second year so I figured most of it out on my own. HOwever, a freshman NEEDS to see this. I had to learn the hard way...

November 9 | Unregistered CommenterTravis

[...] How To: Register for Classes [...]

[...] How to Register for Classes | Hack College The Fall semester is rapidly tumbling toward a conclusion. Might be time to start pondering your winter course load. Here’s a great tutorial from Hack College on getting through the registration process unscathed. [...]

[...] Register for Classes, the Right Way [...]

great tips. the physical distance one is always, always important. Sometimes you can get away with it if the one class in trouble for tardiness is a lecture hall ( mine was) but its best to not being running like a madman/woman. it was interesting, but no fun at all.

August 12 | Unregistered CommenterNatasha

I have a different approach: I register as late as possible. For some classes, anyway. Generally, I'll try to get into the classes I can when it's registration time, but if what I need isn't available I just chill out and wait. About a week into the semester, a lot of these classes are free again as people drop them and other people aren't checking up on them. I've found this is the only way to get into a lot of classes at my college, without a lot of credits/early registration. If that doesn't work, asking the professor works about 80% of the time.

Also, someone at my school made a scheduling program for anyone to use. You just search for the classes you want, and it gives you every possible schedule configuration before you can even get into the system and sign up. It's definitely worth googling around to see if there's somethign similar for your school.

August 18 | Unregistered CommenterHolly

Hack grade please... begging u...

September 1 | Unregistered Commenterjqline

If you hate waiting in line and long queues, come to school earlier than the time scheduled. Plan ahead and you should already have decide what courses to enroll to. There are a lot of information on the internet regarding course descriptions, the professors, etc and you have to utilize these resources to decide on your courses early on.

Duncan Samuel
Billing And Time Tracking Software

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