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It is required to get 30 hours of credits to complete each year of study so with a schedule of 15 hours per semester it would take four years to complete a degree with SFU.
Around 60 or so semester hours.
For institutions that operate on a regular two semester academic year, a bachelors degree can range between 120 and 128 credit hours.
To be classified as a full time student you must be taking at least 12 credit hours a semester.
124 semester hours
145
It depends on how many credit hours each class is. If each class is 4 credit hours, it is 12 classes. If each is 3 credit hours it is 16 classes. Most likely is is a combination of classes with different credit hours, so it is not possible to say how many classes 48 credit hours is in a individual situation.
If you need 15 credits hours, and your attending a college or university that operates on a regular two semester academic year, you can finish the degree in one semester as a full-time student.
Answer 1: All associates degrees take two years to earn if they're pursued "full time"......meaning the student taking 15 semester credit hours per semester, for two semester (or 30 semester credit hours) per year, for two years, thereby earning the associate's degree's typical 60 semester credit hours. A bachelors degree, by way of reference, is double that: 120 semester credit hours, which typically takes a full-time student four years.It matters not what is the subject. The associates degree, regardless of subject, typically takes a full-time student two (2) years to earn.
For colleges and universities that operate on a regular two semester academic year, 16 hours of class contact time is equivalent to one credit for the semester. Thus, a three credit course is required to have 48 hours of class contact time for the semester. I am only going one semester
It depends on where you are pursuing the degree and the academic semester system of the institution. Some institutions operate on a semester system, others on a quarter system, while others on a tri-semester system. For example, those colleges and universities that operate on a regular semester system a bachelor's degree can run between 120 to 128 credits. For those on a quarter system it could run approximately 180 credit hours. Thus, I believe the school your are referring to is on a quarter semester system where 180 credit hours would equal 120 credits for institutions that operate on a regular semester system. In this case the 180 credit hours would appear to be correct for a bachelor's degree.