72 Semester Units
67 quarter hours equals 44.67 semester hours.
Each semester unit is 1.5 quarter units. This generally holds true across US schools.
12 units ,2 semesters. each semester carries 6 units
The second semester cumulative average will be calculated by the number of units in your second semester.
An Associates Degree is essentially 60 semester units, and a Bachelors is approximately 120. A semester unit is a semester unit, and the "status" or "category" of a semester unit does not change in the junior or senior years of a bachelors degree program. In other words, a 3 unit class in your freshman year, carries the same weight as a 3 unit class in your senior year. Semester units are semester units. You will find the "equivalent to" scenario posted in many jobs advertised by cities and counties. In some job postings, they will actually give you the total number of semester units required to be "equivalent to" a particular degree program. I have never seen a distinction as to any factor which limits where those semester units came from, as long as it is an acredited college or university (including junior colleges). This said, the computation is simple: A single AA Degree is worth 60 semester units; a second AA Degree is worth an additional 60 semester units, for a total then of 120, and so on. Two AA's then are worth one BA, while four AA's are worth two BA's (4 x 60=240 units). The Human Resource Managers I have spoken to, agree that this is the correct interpretation.
Typically, one year of college equates to about 30 semester units, assuming you are enrolled full-time and complete two semesters. Each semester usually consists of around 15 units, depending on the specific courses taken. However, the exact number may vary based on the institution's curriculum and your course load.
The time it takes to complete 120 units in college typically depends on the course load taken each semester. Generally, a full-time student takes around 15-16 units per semester, which would mean completing 120 units in about 8 semesters, or roughly 4 years. However, if a student takes fewer units per semester, it could take longer to complete the degree.
It's not by day, but by semester. Within the US it is approximately 60 credits total in coursework, and the rest is preparing and defending the dissertation.
The final tally will be the average of your two semesters. Your second semester grade will only reflect your second semester units.
This is 2 semesters. I am using 12 units per semester to figure the value.
The average student probably carries 12-15 units per semester, so if you wanted more I imagine you would have about 18-21. Do you realize how many classes that is? Each class is generally 3 units, so 21 unit would be 7 courses. If these are solids and if this is your first semester I would suggest you start with 12-15. That is a heavy course load with 18-21 units.
It takes generally two years for the MA. That amounts to about 30-40 units.