Old Class Schedules
- SmurfBlueSnuggie
- Posts: 256
- Joined: Thu Jun 06, 2013 12:47 am
Old Class Schedules
Is there a way to look up my old class schedules for BYU? Not just what term I took what class, but what time of day I took it?
It doesn't matter what happened to get you to today, beyond shaping your understanding. What really matters is where you go from here.
- SmurfBlueSnuggie
- Posts: 256
- Joined: Thu Jun 06, 2013 12:47 am
Re: Old Class Schedules
And if there's a campus schedule from March of '09, that'd be great too.
It doesn't matter what happened to get you to today, beyond shaping your understanding. What really matters is where you go from here.
Re: Old Class Schedules
Here's the Winter 2009 class schedule: http://registrar.byu.edu/registrar/acad ... /20091.pdfSmurfBlueSnuggie wrote:And if there's a campus schedule from March of '09, that'd be great too.
If you go to AIM, under Record Summary, it lists the classes you were in each semester, along with the section number, and that should be enough to let you match it up with a class time from the schedule.
- SmurfBlueSnuggie
- Posts: 256
- Joined: Thu Jun 06, 2013 12:47 am
Re: Old Class Schedules
Sweet! Thanks Katya!
It doesn't matter what happened to get you to today, beyond shaping your understanding. What really matters is where you go from here.
Re: Old Class Schedules
I am tired and sick of working, so I decided to come up with a list of reasons why a person might hypothetically want to access their past schedule with times-of-day included:
- Helping to establish an alibi. Now you can tell everyone exactly where you would have been on the night of February the twenty-forth!
- Traveling back in time, Dr. Who-style, in order to present the past you from getting eaten by vampires or turned into a statue, or one of a multitude of innumerable ignominious or disturbing deaths.
- Marital disputes. ("Well, you never took me out to dinner while we were dating!" "Ha! That's because I had an evening class! Look at my schedule!")
- Going back to your class notes and adding posting dates and times to all of them, Twitter-style.
- Finding the numerologic patterns the stars (registrars?) have cast into your life, and using these hidden patterns to unlock the secrets to future wealth, health, and wisdom.
- Calculating how many hours of sleep you could have recuperated had you actually done homework in between classes, instead of sleeping or goofing around on the computer.
- Sharing the schedule with your comrades as the key to a secret cryptogram that will turn the tide for the resistance in the bloody civil war that will begin when Monsanto activates the "killer gene triggers" embedded within all our GMO produce.
- Comparing your schedule to your Significant Other's in order to discover how much you brushed shoulders without knowing it, previous to your relationship.
- Comparing the archived schedule to the one you remember to verify that you are actually you, and not a clone implanted with false memories by the shadow government.
- Compiling an incredibly detailed list of information about yourself so that you can train someone (a kandra?) to impersonate you impeccably while you embark on a secret mission to take down the shadow government.
- Settling an argument about the amount of time it takes to run from the Richards Building to the HFAC (in between classes).
- Relearning classroom numbers so that you can go back in time, Dr. Who-style, to leave treats for your past self underneath desks.
- Analyzing class data to see if there were any trends you unconsciously followed in selecting your classes. ("Wow--I always opted for small classes on ground-level rooms...and ones where the professors all liked flan!")
- Seeing if American Heritage was really as long as you remember.
That was kind of fun. If anyone wants to add to this list, please do so.
- Helping to establish an alibi. Now you can tell everyone exactly where you would have been on the night of February the twenty-forth!
- Traveling back in time, Dr. Who-style, in order to present the past you from getting eaten by vampires or turned into a statue, or one of a multitude of innumerable ignominious or disturbing deaths.
- Marital disputes. ("Well, you never took me out to dinner while we were dating!" "Ha! That's because I had an evening class! Look at my schedule!")
- Going back to your class notes and adding posting dates and times to all of them, Twitter-style.
- Finding the numerologic patterns the stars (registrars?) have cast into your life, and using these hidden patterns to unlock the secrets to future wealth, health, and wisdom.
- Calculating how many hours of sleep you could have recuperated had you actually done homework in between classes, instead of sleeping or goofing around on the computer.
- Sharing the schedule with your comrades as the key to a secret cryptogram that will turn the tide for the resistance in the bloody civil war that will begin when Monsanto activates the "killer gene triggers" embedded within all our GMO produce.
- Comparing your schedule to your Significant Other's in order to discover how much you brushed shoulders without knowing it, previous to your relationship.
- Comparing the archived schedule to the one you remember to verify that you are actually you, and not a clone implanted with false memories by the shadow government.
- Compiling an incredibly detailed list of information about yourself so that you can train someone (a kandra?) to impersonate you impeccably while you embark on a secret mission to take down the shadow government.
- Settling an argument about the amount of time it takes to run from the Richards Building to the HFAC (in between classes).
- Relearning classroom numbers so that you can go back in time, Dr. Who-style, to leave treats for your past self underneath desks.
- Analyzing class data to see if there were any trends you unconsciously followed in selecting your classes. ("Wow--I always opted for small classes on ground-level rooms...and ones where the professors all liked flan!")
- Seeing if American Heritage was really as long as you remember.
That was kind of fun. If anyone wants to add to this list, please do so.
- SmurfBlueSnuggie
- Posts: 256
- Joined: Thu Jun 06, 2013 12:47 am
Re: Old Class Schedules
Like^
Actually, comparing schedule with Significant Other is probably the closest. A friend wanted as detailed description of a particular day in my life as was possible. He wanted to compare it to his because.... well, actually I'm not entirely sure why. It was fun anyways.
And I found my lost journal from freshman year in the process!!!
Actually, comparing schedule with Significant Other is probably the closest. A friend wanted as detailed description of a particular day in my life as was possible. He wanted to compare it to his because.... well, actually I'm not entirely sure why. It was fun anyways.
And I found my lost journal from freshman year in the process!!!
It doesn't matter what happened to get you to today, beyond shaping your understanding. What really matters is where you go from here.
Re: Old Class Schedules
OoOoh, how's that? What do you think of your freshman self?SmurfBlueSnuggie wrote: And I found my lost journal from freshman year in the process!!!
- SmurfBlueSnuggie
- Posts: 256
- Joined: Thu Jun 06, 2013 12:47 am
Re: Old Class Schedules
I missed that journal so much! It has records of some of my favorite years in it. But I'd put it in an old scripture case, in a box, under my winter clothes. I basically emptied my closet looking for it to answer this question. It was the third or fourth time trying to find it since graduation.
I liked my freshman self. I was immature, and very aware of it. So I don't feel too embarrassed to read just how immature I was. It was so much fun. I met my best friends that year. The speed with which I developed crushes was pretty entertaining, though. Day one of the journal and I'm already describing my crush in very flowery terms. Terms I still use with guys I find truly beautiful, but never out loud, and rarely in my journal.
I liked my freshman self. I was immature, and very aware of it. So I don't feel too embarrassed to read just how immature I was. It was so much fun. I met my best friends that year. The speed with which I developed crushes was pretty entertaining, though. Day one of the journal and I'm already describing my crush in very flowery terms. Terms I still use with guys I find truly beautiful, but never out loud, and rarely in my journal.
It doesn't matter what happened to get you to today, beyond shaping your understanding. What really matters is where you go from here.