(12-11-2018, 05:14 AM)Ideas Wrote: Is there a way I can see when my year expires? I took a TECEP in Feb/Mar but don't remember when. It seems like they may be counting my year from when I enrolled in the TECEP, not when I took it?
Also, what if I take a TECEP to extend my enrollment, but I already had credit for that course? It should still give me the year?
If you look under your profile in OSS you should see your start date after your enrollment status. This is either the date you officially enrolled or the date your last renewal kicked in. It appears that this date gets reset each time you extend the year by taking a new course... or at least it did for me: my original start date was Sep 5th and when I look at it now it shows Nov 14th, which relates to the start of the capstone course. Assuming that is the last reset date, your enrollment status expires one year from that date... though I believe there is also a grace period of 30 days.
The clock begins 9-10 days after the start of the term that the most recent course or TECEP was registered for. It doesn't matter when (or if) you completed the TECEP, the clock starts at the same time.
For example, say you registered to take a TECEP in the September term, and that term began August 27th, your clock would start on September 5th. So you'd have until September 4th of the following year to take another course (or TECEP).
As for verifying the term you registered for, I'd imagine that will show in OSS under the schedule link in your academic profile. But if not, you may have received a "Course Registration Confirmation" email confirmation with the details, plus an email from the bursar confirming payment which may be used to help determine a date.
As for signing up for a TECEP for a course you have taken before... I don't see why would be any different than normal. As far as I know, there is no limitation on how many times you can take the same course, though I haven't really looked. Those clocks are automated, so if it lets you register and you don't withdraw before the date the new period kicks in, you should get credit.