Syracuse University's Academic Calendar Committee has released the 2009-10 academic calendar. The calendar is very similar to past University schedules and includes no major changes. However, in the Fall 2009 semester, two religious holidays -- Eid Ul-Fitr (Sept. 21) and Yom Kippur (Sept. 28) -- fall on two consecutive Mondays in September, requiring adjustments at the end of the semester.
Fall classes will end a day later (on Monday, Dec. 14, instead of the previous Friday); one-half of a reading day will be eliminated (the morning of Dec. 15 will be a reading period, with examinations scheduled that afternoon); and the last final examinations will fall on a Monday (Dec. 21) instead of the previous Friday.
The schedules for spring and summer 2010 are unchanged from previous calendars.
The full 2009-10 academic calendar is available online at
http://registrar.syr.edu/acadcalendars/index.html#acad_calendars .
Traditionally, the Academic Calendar Committee plots a five-year calendar, developed every five years, for the institution. But according to University Registrar Maureen Breed, chair of the committee, this type of template no longer meets the University's needs. "Our enterprise computing systems are calendar-dependent, with key dates required for our system-supported business processes," she says. "And, increasingly, campus offices need to know future dates for a variety of planning purposes." A rolling five-year calendar is planned, with dates for 2010-11 and beyond yet to be developed.
The 11-person committee began plotting the 2009-10 calendar last October. Working from a series of guiding principles, the committee pondered potential changes such as starting fall classes after Labor Day, extending Thanksgiving break to a week, lengthening the semester break and eliminating observance of certain religious holidays as days without classes. (Additional exploration of these options will be conducted in the coming year.)
The committee consulted with various University bodies, including the Chancellor's Cabinet, the Dean's Council and the Academic Coordinating Committee. A draft plan was posted online and feedback sought from the University community. After assessing input, the committee developed its recommendations and submitted its final report to Vice Chancellor and Provost Eric F. Spina, who reviewed and approved the final calendar, with the concurrence of Chancellor and President Nancy Cantor.
Members of the Academic Calendar Committee are: