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Welcome to LS&A: Using this Handbook
A letter from the Director, Academic Information and Publications
Congratulations and welcome to the College of Literature, Science,
and the Arts. You are about to enroll in a College with 15,544 undergraduate students, 1,848 graduate students, and approximately 900
faculty, by far the largest among the nineteen schools that comprise
the University of Michigan. We hope you enjoy an exciting and
productive career in the College.
In this booklet we will relate some of the facts you will need
to know as an entering LS&A student, and give you some guidance
on what the first-year college experience is like for most students.
Our immediate purpose here is to have the academic side of your
Orientation period go smoothly. You can help accomplish this goal
by taking the time to peruse this booklet. You should find the
information highly relevant to choices you will face and decisions
you must make at Orientation and some months beyond.
In this booklet, among other things we are going to sketch
out the requirements for a degree from the College, and as we
do so you will learn that the academic choices in LS&A are
many. In fact, you will find that there are few specific requirements
for an LS&A degree – be it a Bachelor of Arts (A.B.),
a Bachelor of Science (B.S.), or a Bachelor in General Studies
(B.G.S.) degree.
We are also going to provide you with a Course Guide which contains information about many representative courses from which you may choose your course elections. You should remember, however, as you read through and use the Course Guide that some of the courses may close before you attend the Orientation Program. Therefore you should have a number of options planned. For example, approximately three-fifths of you needing to take Introductory Composition will be able to elect a course in the Fall Term. The rest of you will have to postpone electing a course to meet this requirement until the Winter Term. Or again, only about forty of you will be able to elect History 200, Greece to 201 B.C. On the other hand, every one of you should be able to get into the appropriate course you may need in mathematics, chemistry, or language.
When you attend Orientation, before enrolling for courses you
will talk twice with an academic advisor in the College, meet
with student peer advisors, and have plenty of time to discuss
whatever is on your mind with your student orientation leaders.
The College will also give you a copy of the 2000-01 LS&A
Bulletin (college catalog). In the meantime, you can prepare
for Orientation by reading and working with this FirstYear
Handbook and the Course Guide and other enclosed materials. You may also find it informative and useful to check out our LS&A Student Academic Affairs website at www.lsa.umich.edu/saa.
Best wishes in the great adventure that lies ahead!
For the Office of LS&A Academic Information and Publications,

Robert D. Wallin, Director
Academic Information and Publications
University
of Michigan
| College of LS&A | Student
Academic Affairs
This
page maintained by LS&A Academic Information and Publications, 1228 Angell Hall
Copyright
© 2000 The Regents
of the University of Michigan,
Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA +1 734 764-1817
Trademarks of the University of Michigan may not
be electronically or otherwise altered or separated from this
document or used for any non-University purpose.
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