|
|||||||||||
|
2002-2003 Calendar |
Tests and Examinations Tests and examinations are important parts of the educational process. They must be conducted under fair conditions which allow students to demonstrate what they have learned. Disruptions or attempts to obtain an unfair advantage are offences against academic process and carry severe penalties. (See Senate Policy on Academic Honesty and Academic Conduct.) The following regulations apply to tests and examinations. Identification Students who are being tested or examined are required to present their sessional identification card and acceptable photo identification. Answer Booklets Answer booklets are the property of the University. Test papers, examination booklets and other answer forms remain the property of the University unless they are released by an instructor. Students may not remove them from the test or examination room without permission; nor may they possess blank examination booklets. Students' Right to Review Students may always have the opportunity, under properly controlled conditions, to review and discuss their graded test and examination answers, but final examination answer booklets (and at the discretion of the course director, other answer booklets) remain the property of the University, and are retained by the teaching unit for a certain period of time before they are destroyed. Tests and Examinations During the Term Restriction at End of Term In the fall/winter session, the total value of any test(s) or examination(s) given in the last two weeks of classes in a term must be no more than 20 per cent of the final mark for the course. Scheduling of Tests Except where testing is conducted during individual appointments which accommodate the schedules of students (for example: individual oral interviews in language courses, individually scheduled make-up tests), tests or examinations given during the term must be held within the hours regularly scheduled for the course in question. Students' Right of Refusal Students who are asked to write tests or examinations in contravention of the preceding two regulations may refuse to do so without academic penalty; they also have the right to raise the matter with the Chair of the department or the division in which the course is offered, or with the dean. Formally Scheduled Examinations Final Examination Period There is a final examination period at the end of each term. Examination Schedules The dates and times of formally scheduled examinations are listed on the Office of the Registrar's Web site http://www.registrar.yorku.ca/. Examinations may last two or three hours. Missed Examinations A student who misses an examination should contact the Office of the Registrar within 48 hours of the examination. A student who wishes to write a make-up examination must petition for deferred standing in the course. Rewriting of Examinations The Faculty of Arts has no provision for the rewriting of a final examination to improve a mark. |
© York University
Privacy & Legal