Math 0925/1400 Registration

The corequisite MATH 0925/1400 course is designed to present the material from both MATH 0925 and MATH 1400 with the assumption that students have not yet mastered the content in MATH 0925. The supplemental 0900-level course provides students with extra help and resources to support their work in the college-level course. Rather than having to take MATH 0925 and MATH 1400 one after the other, the corequisite course allows for them to be completed simultaneously. Students are not able to take the separate MATH 0925 and MATH 1400 classes concurrently--they must enroll in the specifically designated corequisite class. Students must submit a request form in order to register for MATH 0925/1400 (rather than manually registering via WyoWeb). 

submit a request to register for math 0925/1400

MATH 0925/1400 FAQs

You will be notified via UW email when your request has been processed. Each form is time-stamped and processed in the order it is received. Please do not submit more than one form for the same registration request. The form will be available until registration closes. 

Students working in classroom.

If you would like to change course sections, please fill out the form with updated information to reflect this. When requesting a section change, do not drop yourself from the course or else you may lose your seat. 

 

If you would like to drop the corequisite course after you've been registered, you may do so in WyoWeb. Please be sure to drop both sections (0925 & 1400). If you would like to re-register for the course after a drop, please fill out the form again. 

The MATH 0925/1400 corequisite course has specifically designated course sections that need to be paired correctly in order for students to get credit for the courses. To ensure that students are registered for the applicable sections, we complete the registration manually at the student's request. 

Yes. Be sure to reach out to the instructor to confirm this is possible and discuss next steps. 

The course is 6 credit hours worth of work, but only three of those credit hours count towards graduation.