Skip to end of metadata
Go to start of metadata

You are viewing an old version of this page. View the current version.

Compare with Current View Page History

« Previous Version 6 Next »

Course and Site Structure Patterns Draft

The following are course and site structure patterns that have emerged from user research at several universities and their composite schools/departments. As best possible, these finding are from the instructor/student point of view. Red text indicates data expected to be shown in the user interface. <Green text> are terms applied to these structures from the data dictionary.

Simple Course


A single course is associated with a single site. Student enrollment is in the course, the only course offering.

Large Lecture Courses


A course with multiple sections is associated to a single site with instructor and/or student populated sections. Student enrollment is in the course, the only course offering. Site tools can publish to or limit views by sections.


A course with multiple lectures and sections is taught by one instructor and associated to a single site with instructor and/or student populated sections. Student enrollment is independent in either the lecture or section. Site tools can publish to or limit views by sections.


A course with multiple lectures and sections is taught by two instructors. Each lecture/section set is associated with single site with instructor and/or student populated sections. Student enrollment in a section put him/her into a lecture, or vice-versa. Site tools can publish to or limit views by sections.


A course with one lecture and multiple section types is taught by one instructor and associated to a single site with instructor and/or student populated sections. Student enrollment is independent in either the lecture, lab, or discussion section. Site tools can publish to or limit views by sections.

Cross-listed Courses


Two course offerings are represented by a single course and associated to a single site. Student enrollment is by course offering, usually separate departments. Site tools can publish to or limit views by course enrollments.


Two course offerings are represented by a single course with multiple sections with instructor and/or student populated sections. Student enrollment is by course offering, usually separate departments. A single instructor teaches this course. Site tools can publish to or limit views by course enrollments and/or sections.


Two course offerings are represented by a single course with multiple sections with instructor and/or student populated sections. Sections are organized by department. Student enrollment is by course offering, usually separate departments. These departments are represented by two or more instructors who co-teach this course. Site tools can publish to or limit views by course enrollments and/or sections.

Language Courses


A course with multiple sections is associated to a single site with SIS populated sections. Student enrollment is into a section. Site tools can publish to or limit views by sections.


A course with multiple sections is associated to multiple sites (based on instructor preference) with SIS populated sections. Student enrollment is into a section. Site tools can publish to or limit views by sections.

Professional School Courses


Virtually the same course is offered over multiple terms and is associated with a site. This site is slightly modified or versioned between terms. Student enrollment into the course is done via a separate registrar from the larger university. Student membership in the site is accomplished through a batch upload.

No-Term Course


An ongoing course is associated with a single site. Student enrollment is in the course, but is very fluid and not tied to academic terms. These types of course/site structures are seen in professional schools and distance learning environments.

  • No labels