<p>in the MWF scheduling, the MWF refers to Monday Wed and Fri.. I get that.. but TR stands for Thursday, correct?</p>
<p>You are correct.</p>
<p>oh, and one more... when I'm registering for biology/chem classes that require a lab course... do I register for both Bio 101 and Bio 101 [lab] SEPARETELY?</p>
<p>TR doesn't stand solely for Thursday, it stands for Tuesday AND Thursday. R alone represents Thursday.</p>
<p>As for your second question, the system through which you register for classes should check to make sure you're registering for both before it lets you into the class if the lab is mandatory.</p>
<p>Check your institutions abbreviations but TR generally means tues and thurs--T for tues and R for thurs.</p>
<p>You usually have to register and pay for both the lecture class and the lab separately. Sometimes people fail the lecture and have to retake just the lecture. If it is all inclusive, then the lab should show up in your class schedule. If it doesn't, then you need to register for the lab separately.</p>
<p>TR?! Thats lame, its usually TTH.</p>
<p>Yeah, I've seen TTH (Tuesday+Thursday), and TR = Thursday. R = Thursday?! *** is that crap?</p>
<p>At my school, T=Tuesday, and R=Thursday, so they show it TR for Tuesday/Thursday classes.</p>
<p>TR - Tuesday + Thursday</p>
<p>I've usually seen it as T= tuesday and R= thursday</p>
<p>Here it's TR for Tuesday & Thursday classes as well, I think its easier to figure out - two letters for two days.</p>
<p>Ya, adding an extra letter is just waaaaayy too difficult.</p>
<p>
[quote[when I'm registering for biology/chem classes that require a lab course... do I register for both Bio 101 and Bio 101 [lab]
SEPARETELY?
[/quote]
</p>
<p>Yes you register for them separately and you make sure that the lab section you choose (as there will be many) does not conflict with your other classes (at some schools you willb e automatically flagged if you have more than one class scheduled in the same time period on the same day). If it is a beginning bio/chem, the lecture class will usually be a large class (at many schools well over 100 people) with labs being much smaller groups.</p>
<p>Remember to check the policy for lab and lecture at your school. At some schools you may receive 2 grades; one for lab and one for lecture, while at others you receive one combined grade because the lab is a percentage of your overall grade. </p>
<p>In addition, if your class requires both a lab and a lecture, it could be all or nothing , meaning you must have both the lab and the lecture in order to get credit, and if you drop one , you may have to drop the other.</p>