The Ultimate Guide to Applying to Stanford University.
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Stanford does not have a standard course catalog numbering system. In general, courses numbered from 1 through 99 are primarily for freshmen and sophomores. Courses numbered from 100 through 199 are primarily for juniors and seniors; some departments, however, offer courses numbered from 200 through 299 for juniors and seniors. Most courses numbered 200 and above are for graduate students; no.
Use of this system is subject to Stanford University's rules and regulations. See the Stanford Administrative Guide for more information.
SEE programming includes one of Stanford's most popular engineering sequences: the three-course Introduction to Computer Science taken by the majority of Stanford undergraduates, and seven more advanced courses in artificial intelligence and electrical engineering.
The Non-Degree Option (NDO) makes it possible for qualified working professionals to enroll in Stanford graduate-level classes on a course-by-course basis before being admitted to a degree program. NDO students apply each quarter to take individual courses, work toward a graduate certificate, or take up to 15 course units that may later count toward a master's degree (if the student applies.
Another avenue is sharing licensed online coursework with other colleges and universities. These can be full courses or, in many cases, shorter modules. For instance, a computer science course at one university could incorporate an online module on cryptography or database design taught by a world-class expert in that specialty at another university. For MOOC students. Stanford faculty are.
Under the agreement, UNext can use Stanford's name and can adapt for the web coursework created by Stanford faculty. (Professors from the School of Engineering will be the first to participate.) The new company -- which is also working with Columbia University, the University of Chicago, and the London School of Economics and Political Science -- plans to sell the courses to multinational and.