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Student Registration Comments
If any one wants to look at something funny, a summary of our comments when SIMS asks you whether or not you got all the classes you want:
http://www.sfu.ca/irp/courses/CourseFullTurnaway/documents/crs.avail.survey.1071.appendix2.pdf
I like how this proves that registration dates are a mystery:
International Student: International students should have priority because they pay more.
Local Student: Why do international students get to register before people who live here?
Meathead Athlete: Why does my reg date suck and I register after all my other varsity friends, its not fair.
Non Athlete: How is it fair that all the athletes get to register before us with worse grades?
http://www.sfu.ca/irp/courses/CourseFullTurnaway/documents/crs.avail.survey.1071.appendix2.pdf
I like how this proves that registration dates are a mystery:
International Student: International students should have priority because they pay more.
Local Student: Why do international students get to register before people who live here?
Meathead Athlete: Why does my reg date suck and I register after all my other varsity friends, its not fair.
Non Athlete: How is it fair that all the athletes get to register before us with worse grades?
Comments
EDIT - You can declare your major independently of goSFU, at least as far as I know. See the advisor for your chosen faculty to find out how to do it.
While some faculties don't really care and just make it a free for all, and don't necessarily offer things when needed, since there is so much open choice and no fixed structure.
A lot of these comments seem contradictory, and students don't know the tricks to get around them (talking to advisors for waivers, talking to professors / advisors for entrance into full classes, waiting for the first week for inevitable drops), but one that sticks out is why some faculties have wait lists and why some don't.
i should have been more clear but i included that [length of study] when i said "grades", I wrote CGPA earlier but edited it to reflect the broader measure.
However, I totally disagree that Athletes should get priority registration. What makes them so special? This is a university and we are all up here to learn, not to get hurt. Also, this is quite unfair to students who too are athletes but their sport is not a varsity sport. Ex: JayDub is into Rowling and need to practice, but he doesn't get priority registration.
As for international students, I am really sorry for their predictiment. But SFU is a public university and it is funded mostly by tax payer money. Therefore, if International Students ended up taking most of the space in courses and Local Students are stuck with Women Studies and Philosophy (offense intended), there are going to be lynch mobs.
We should just start launching DOS attack against the SFU server the moment registration starts. That should make this a little fairer.
This is also the reason why I think having students with bad GPA register last is a bad idea. They register last, they are stuck with stupid courses taught by retarded professors, their GPA take a major pounding, they register last again next semester.
Then again, students with bad GPA needs to do better and make the effort to overcome adversity to climb up the ladder. Kinda like the disadvantage poor trying to get rich. Such is life.
Also you're not really suggesting that academic environment (which is extremely limited in scope compared to other environmental factors) can account for 3-4 lettergrade differences are you?
However, someone in their third semester whos on the open scholarship should not be able to register before someone in their 6th semester with an ok GPA.
That said, I'm not even sure thats the case, since noone knows how the dates are calculated in depth.
Scholarships should have nothing to do with registration, but GPA and amount of creduts accumulated should.
If you go to go.sfu, I think the 'Grade Points' number has something to do with registration in some manner in the system, although I'm sure the number is calculated in some form by GPA and total amount of credits taken, or is it fully?
considering university is supposed to be an institution of learning, i really don't see how you think that people who do well academically shouldn't get priority dates while people who do well in something totally irrelevant should. everyone have schedules to work around, do you give priority to people who have jobs too?
in terms of grade point vs. gpa, it pretty much comes down to what you want to reward: achievement or sticking through. if it's the former, then it makes very much sense that someone with less credits but better grades should register before someone who's been there longer but with worse grades. if instead you want to reward people for just being there, then basing it on the number of credits would be the way to go, the grade point is sort of the middle-ground between the two.
You know what, if I lived at home and wasnt working 40 hours a week to pay my tuition and rent I'd have higher grades than I do. It really is like a circle, don't have to pay all of the tuition so you don't have to work as much or take out as much loans, reducing your stress.
I'm saying the fact someone is on a scholarship is irrelevant and should not give them any kind of priority, and the only one that should matter is the grades + credts -- grade points. I don't think grade points are irrelevant, I think the fact that someone is on a scholarship is. I'm referring to the title of being on the scholarship as opposed to the grades one has.
The only time this presents a problem is when someone with less grade points (and or credits) is on a scholarship and gets to register before someone with more grade points (and or credits).
this is, of course, in the context that there are priority registrations, you've been very clear about not wanting them at all.
I only made one mention to outside of school obligations a few posts ago, in which I said those who are given scholarships are given an edge by not having to pay their tuition, I didn't say that was unfair, I was making a statement of my beliefs of how the system can be cyclical. People without scholarships may have to work more, having less time to study. I didn't claim either has a right to priority, it'd be ludicrous for me to suggest people who have outside of school obligations should get priority, how would we even determine that fairly?
Example: I personally have a private scholarship which is not school administered and I am not given any kind of priority registering, but I'm expected by the organization sponsoring me to fulfill several requirements: Credit Load, Min GPA, Graduation Time etc... This is also requires me to put forth a certain amount of hours in the work force, which has relegated me to taking a lot of DE when I can't get the classes I want. (Although I'm in my last year and registration hasnt been as much as an issue this semester).
What I've been saying is the following: Simply having a scholarship should not give you priority registration, HOWEVER, to have a scholarship generally you need a high GPA, I think any priority should be based on GPA, credits, grade points (however you want to classify it, although grade points is a combination of credits and GPA being more valid).
Someone should earn their priority in the que by their grade points alone, how is it fair someone in third semester gets to register before someone in their sixth, simply because they happen to be on a scholarship that semester when the other person has more grade points? I'm curious as to whether you agree or disagree with this last statement.
To sum up my beliefs again, the title of a scholarship should not give someone priority, their grade points should, and to the benefit of scholarship students, their grade points put them ahead of a large amount of people anyway.
The part I don't understand is quoted here: My question was why do you accept the latter (working around schedules) more than the former (scholarships) when the latter is totally irrelevant while the former is not?
I don't know how better to frame the question.
If someone on a scholarship happens to register before me because they have more grade points power to them, but the way it works right now is flawed.
My friend has got a scholarship and so gets to reigister before me. I understand and accept this. But he registered a FULL MONTH before me. My registration date was the last one... Dec 5 at 6:30PM. EVERY FLIPPIN COURSE I WANTED TO TAKE WAS FULL!
One class I wanted had 3 seats left but I didn't meet reserve capacity. It was a Surrey class and I am registered at SFU Surrey. Therefore, I should automatically meet the damn requirement. The class got filled up an hour later. One class I only got into because I was luckily up at 3am searching for classes and a spot opened. 75% of the classes I'm registered for at the moment are random evening classes at Harbour Center because nothing else was open.
As forementioned, I hate registration.
Application time is kind of a arbitrary merit.
Protip: (people drop out of classes first week, ALL the time...theres been semesters where i plan on taking a class even though its full and i cant get in)
Just work hard every semester (including summer) and your GPA will go up. Earliest reg date I got was on the 3rd day. Used to be 1 month after it started, then 4 weeks, then 3, and so on. You know, just be patient.
Thank god I'm out of there this April.