Using Your Degree Audit
Make sure the courses you are taking count toward graduation in the way you plan.
Drew Bailey graduation
Use the Degree Audit
Make sure the courses you are taking count toward graduation in the way you plan.
Use Your Degree Audit:
- Login to myCUinfo and click on the "student" tab.
- Go to Academic Resources and click on Degree Audit/Transfer Credit Evaluation.
- You will then be transferred to a page where you will be asked to re-enter your Identikey information.
- Click on Current Program(s)/Major(s) for your degree audit for your primary major. (If you are in the ENVS society and policy track or ENVS environmental science track ("old" major) and you want to see your progress in the "new" major, click on the "What If" link and under the Degree Program option select ENVS-BA.)
- Wait for the audit to show up on the screen and click, "Open Audit."
- Your “current” audit shows your progress in credits, MAPS, CORE and your primary major.
- In the two sections for your ENVS requirements, you will notice a link to the list of ENVS courses offered in the current semester: “To see current semester course offerings, follow this link: ENVS courses". Use this link to find courses available in the semester for which you are registering. The degree audit contains additional course options that may not be offered every semester.
To track your progress in ENVS-SPT or ENVS-EST (the previous major), please use the Major Tracking Sheet (ENVS Major Declared Prior to Summer 2010).
Courses applied to the ENVS major Science and Policy (SPT) or Environmental Science (EST) Tracks may be found under “Electives” and “Core Requirements.”
- Announcements -
Thu Oct 24, 2013
Thu Dec 19, 2013
- Events -
Mon Aug 26, 2013
11:00 am
Tue Sep 10, 2013
05:00 pm
- News -
Jun 18, 2013
Blowin’ in the Wind: More and More Sickening Dust
Jun 10, 2013
Amount of dust blown across the West is increasing, says CU-Boulder study
- Faculty Focus -
Carl Koval
Removal of Carbon Dioxide from the Atmosphere using Electrochemically Modulated Complexation; Properties and Uses of Ionic Liquids; Non-Mechanical Pumping of Fluids
