Tips for Class Selection (at SCAD)
Disclaimer: This post is based on my experience in at SCAD where we take 3 classes a week and run on a quarter system (10 weeks per quarter: 3 quarters = 1 academic year).Â
Incoming Freshman (Welcome!)
I just wanted to let you know that for your first quarter, you will not choose your own schedule. The sign-up process is a bit difficult and the advisors assign you all classes to minimize mistakes and also they tend to group you in a single class with your roommates and neighbors. Youâll be taking a class called First Year Experience (FYE) and it meets just once a week and you essential learn the in and outs of how SCAD works. You may hear that itâs a waste of time from older students but really it is such a good resource because your teacher is one of the advisors and they will teach you how to sign up for classes and how to access the different pages on mySCAD.
THINK EARLY
Plan out what you want to take weeks before registration! Look through your required classes, SCAD Pro Advisor, and even take a visit to your academic advisor. Registrations will happen in order of Grad Students and Athletes, Seniors, Juniors, Sophomores, and Freshmen. And within those, youâll be organized among your peers by academic hours completed. [To find SCAD Pro Advisor: Log into mySCAD > Student Workspace Tab > Student Toolkit Channel > Itâll be listed under the title âCourses and Academic Resourcesâ > SCAD Pro Advisor]
Donât be afraid of early classes. Through my own experience, I actually enjoy having 8 am classes. Not because I like waking up that early, but because Iâm able to start my day and get more done which is convenient for my outside of class requirements, job, and I can still have free time for friends. Itâs not for everyone, and itâs not always easy but try it out once. I work better in earlier classes but some of my friends work better in evening classes. Just know that most classes, save for some architecture, interior design, and film classes, are 2.5 hours, meet twice a week, and start at 8 am, 11 am, 2 pm, 5 pm, and some foundation courses are also at 8 pm.Â
CHECK THE PREREQUISITES. You canât go wrong by visiting your academic advisor to make sure you take classes in an order that will benefit you best. Especially if you want to graduate early or you changed your major. Just sign up for an appointment early because it does fill up close to the course registration dates. Also know that if you want to attend one of the abroad campuses in Hong Kong or Lacoste, France, you will need to plan 3 quarters minimum ahead because of the signup processes. Itâs an amazing program (Iâm writing this from France :D ) but not every course can be offered each quarter so itâs best to plan ahead so you donât accidentally take something on your home campus in Atlanta, Savannah, or Hong Kong.
Give yourself enough time to get to class. There are only 30 minutes between classes so if you donât own a car or the building youâre going to has limited parking spaces it may prove stressful but it is doable. Ex) This last quarter I had an 11 am and then a 2 pm class that was about 7 minutes away by car but the building my first class is in rarely has an empty spot so I would have to walk back home, get lunch, and drive to class within those 30 minutes. Iâd make it to class early so itâs doable but know your comfortable stress levels when it comes to transportation.Â
Registration Day!!
 If you have the SCAD app, use it to register. You are able to pre-save the course you want, and once your registration time starts all you have to do is select the classes and hit submit. You can save a lot of classes so if you need to, you can save multiple options just in case something fills up. As a freshman, I donât remember it being an option so I would write out all the codes on paper and the general class info.
Start checking for your registration time around week 3-5 on mySCAD. Set an alarm and make sure you donât miss your time to give you the best chance to get the classes you need. Sometimes registration is described as the Hunger Games because there are so few spots in some courses. *the fasted I ever registered was less than a minute and one of the courses I got was full after a few minutes.
Embody Santaâs habit. Check your registered class list twice after youâre finished.The worst thing is to realize you signed up for an online class when you wanted one on campus or you signed up for a course offered on a different campus than the one youâre on.Â
Something Go Wrong?
âRegistrations will happen in order of Grad Students and Athletes, Seniors, Juniors, Sophomores, and Freshmen. And within those, youâll be organized among your peers by academic hours completed.â That being said, try to have multiple sections of a class youâre happy to take, or completely different types of schedules just in case the class(es) you want fills up before you get to sign up.Â
Waitlist! Itâs not fun to realize that the class you wanted is full so consider the waitlist. There are only 5 spots available and because itâs a waitlist, no guarantees can be made that youâll get in but it is an option available. Itâs come to my saving before, just make sure to be checking your email as that is how the system will notify you that a spot has opened for you.Â
Know who to contact. Be willing to contact your academic advisor if something goes wrong or if you canât find any available classes to take. They can help you, so know that no question is stupid. They are a resource you pay for, so make the best of it.Â
















