TYP courses are designed to provide a comprehensive, immersive learning experience, combining enhancing academic skills, developing theoretical knowledge and critical thinking, and strengthening practical application to ensure students have well-rounded capabilities to transition to undergraduate studies at the University of Toronto.
The full-time study path is divided into two semesters, Fall term (September – December) and Winter term (January – April). For a full-time course load, TYP students are required to take 6 courses in the fall term and 5 courses in the winter term.
All TYP students are required to complete a set of compulsory courses and elective courses . TYP students are also required to enroll in a Faculty of Arts & Science (FAS) Option course and seminar.
The academic requirements for each TYP student include achieving at least 60% in the FAS Option course and a 65% CGPA to successfully transfer to the Faculty of Arts and Science at the University of Toronto.
Fall term
TYP Compulsory Courses
Mandatory courses for all TYP students and are designed to gain foundational knowledge and key skills essential for transitioning to undergraduated studies.
TYP006H1: English Composition
- English Composition concentrates on improving students’ confidence and abilities in expressing themselves, and has the particular objective of equipping them to write university assignments. The course also aims to improve students’ reading and analytic skills. Students are divided into three small classes for this course; this allows for a seminar format which permits students to share their own writings and discuss the readings on the course. Students write regular and frequent assignments in this course, and instructors will give them helpful feed-back on the form, style and content of these assignments. Instructors will also provide individual support to students.
TYP014Y1: Introduction to University Studies
- This course will help students develop and strengthen the academic and life skills required to succeed as university students. It will include presentations on and practice in time management, note taking, study skills, essay writing, and preparation for examinations. In addition, it will deal with important matters of survival for students: financial aid and how to get it, balancing study with family obligations, paid labour and other life contingencies, effective use of major student services, and techniques for dealing with the stresses and complications of academic life. Credit will be awarded for successful completion of the course, but no numerical grade will be assigned.
TYP017H1: Re-Presenting Ourselves as Treaty Peoples in Tkaranto
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Rooted in the land on which we live and work (Tkaran:to), this course locates students within the fraught history of Indigenous-Settler encounters on Indigenous homelands situating them as Treaty people (with inherited responsibilities to the lands upon which they live and work and to the original peoples who continue their stewardship of those lands).
Why is the land acknowledgement (whether it is communicated by Indigenous individuals or by many settler-run institutions) so important—here in Tkaran:to and across Turtle Island (North America)? How do the creation stories of the Anishinaabeg, Haudenosaunee, and Wendat peoples inform our understanding of living ethically in the world, of thinking the highest thought, and of successfully pursuing minobimaatisiiwin (the way of good life)?
Resources, course delivery (pedagogy), modes of evaluation, and learning objectives are based in Indigenous systems of thought. Structured upon a land-based pedagogical model, this course provides an experiential introduction to Indigenous thought, cosmology, lifeway, knowledge systems and governance/guardianship systems and provides students with the tools to process this knowledge and to articulate it for themselves and for others. Learners continue their journey through the history of contact, colonization, and finally into an understanding of what it means to be a treaty person living in Canada today.
TYP Elective Courses
TYP students are required to choose an elective course in math OR science. These elective courses allow students to focus on specialized topics, advanced theories, and applications of mathematical and science concepts.
TYP005H1: Quantitative Reasoning
- This half-course is designed to help students improve their ability to think and reason quantitatively, and to improve their problem-solving skills. The course should also help students to overcome any fears that they may have about learning quantitative information because of previous discouragement that they may have encountered in the acquisition of quantitative skills. The first part of the course is devoted to a consolidation of basic mathematics skills; the second part extends these skills in statistical reasoning about information of the sort frequently encountered in social scientific writing.
TYP015H1F: Reasoning in the Sciences
- This course explores aspects of scientific knowledge that are readily applicable in everyday life and in academic settings. These include: fundamental scientific concepts, the processes of scientific inquiry, the scientific enterprise, and key discoveries in the history of science. A theme that runs throughout the course is science as a way of knowing and not the only way. To facilitate the appreciation of this theme, student presentations, guest lectures, a field trip, and audiovisual presentation of the science topics are incorporated into the course. Course delivery includes lectures, question/answer sessions, discussions, and class activities. Course evaluation consists of attendance, participation, take-home assignments, tests, and optional class presentations.
FAS Option Courses
TYP students are required to enroll in one of six first-year courses offered through the Faculty of Arts and Science. These courses give TYP students a sense of academic expectations and familiarity an undergraduate course, as well as expose them to different fields of study. Each course is accompanied with a tutorial/lab AND a TYP seminar to further support students with their studies.
CSE240H1 & CSE270H1: Introduction to Critical Equity and Solidarity Studies | Community (Dis)Engagement and Solidarity
- This course provides an interdisciplinary intersectional interrogation and examination of systemic inequity and social justice in local and global contexts. It provides a foundation for the field of critical equity and solidarity studies through a concentrated focus on theory and practice as it relates to major concepts, historical perspectives, key debates and radical thought and grassroots community resistance to inequity and oppression. CSE240 introduces and foregrounds the concept of critical equity as ‘praxis’, that is to say as both a theoretical framework and as a lived, embodied, angered and passion-driven anti-colonial contestation of [and resistance to] the structural nature and effects of systemic and institutionalized inequity and oppression. Crucially, this course will center and assert a radical understanding of self-defense.
CAR120Y1: Introduction to Caribbean Studies
- Explores the complex and diverse languages, geographies, regional and national histories, cultural practices, intellectual traditions and political and economic landscapes of the Caribbean region, its people and its diasporas. Students will be introduced to the main questions, themes, and debates in Caribbean Studies. Lectures and readings develop the skills to take an interdisciplinary approach to Caribbean Studies.
SOC101H1F: Introduction to Sociology I: Sociological Perspectives
- This course will challenge your views on a wide range of issues that affect us all. It will also excite your interest in a unique sociological way of understanding your world. We will analyze the globalization of culture, emerging patterns of class, race, and gender inequality in Canada and internationally, criminal and deviant behaviour, and so on. You will learn to understand these and other pressing social issues by analyzing the way the social world is organized. These topics are further taken up in the sequel to this course, SOC150: Introduction to Sociology II: Sociological Inquiries.
BIO120H1 & BIO130H1: Adaptation and Biodiversity | Molecular and Cell Biology
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Principles and concepts of evolution and ecology related to origins of adaptation and biodiversity. Mechanisms and processes driving biological diversification illustrated from various perspectives using empirical and theoretical approaches. Topics include: genetic diversity, natural selection, speciation, physiological, population, and community ecology, maintenance of species diversity, conservation, species extinction, global environmental change, and invasion biology.
INS201H1: Introduction to Indigenous Studies - Foundations
- This course is designed to introduce students to the ideas, methods and themes of the discipline of Indigenous Studies. The course will explore the development of the field of Indigenous Studies in Canada. Topics will include explorations into Indigenous thought, philosophies, knowledge systems, and ways of being. The focus will be on North America with comparative discussions of Indigenous peoples and their experiences from other parts of the world.
INS202H1: Introduction to Indigenous Studies - History & Politics
- This course is designed to introduce students to Indigenous history and politics as they inform the field of Indigenous Studies. The course will provide an overview of the history and politics of Indigenous peoples in Canada. Topics will include Indigenous creation stories, Indigenous treaty-making traditions, settler contact and conflict, history of education, Indigenous rights within the Canadian State and contemporary issues such as food sovereignty, language revitalization, arts, and international relations. The focus will be on North America with comparative discussions of Indigenous peoples and their experiences from other parts of the world.
Seminar Courses
TYP students are required to enroll in one of six first-year courses offered through the Faculty of Arts and Science. Each course is accompanied with a tutorial/ lab AND a TYP seminar (listed below) to further support students with their studies.
TYP051Y1: Introduction to Critical Studies in Equity & Solidarity Seminar
TYP052Y1: Introduction to Sociology Seminar
TYP053Y1: Introduction to Indigenous Studies Seminar
TYP056Y1: Introduction to Caribbean Studies Seminar
TYP057Y1: Biology Seminar
Check out the videos below where our instructors share insights into their fall courses!
TYP057Y1: Bio120/130 Seminar
CAR120Y1: Intro to Caribbean Studies
TYP015H1F: Reasoning in Sciences
Winter Term
TYP Compulsory Courses
Mandatory courses for all TYP students and are designed to gain foundational knowledge and key skills essential for transitioning to ungraduated studies.
WRR103H1: Introduction to Academic Writing
- This course on essay writing is designed to equip students with the skills required to write on different subjects and in a variety of different genres (including critical analysis and argumentative writing). By unpacking the stages of the writing process, this course helps students develop research, critical reading, planning, organization, writing, editing, and proofreading skills. Learners are encouraged to seek additional writing support from the instructor and from the various supports provided at the Transitional Year Programme Writing & Academic Skills Centre.
TYP014Y1: Introduction to University Studies
- This course will help students develop and strengthen the academic and life skills required to succeed as university students. It will include presentations on and practice in time management, note taking, study skills, essay writing, and preparation for examinations. In addition, it will deal with important matters of survival for students: financial aid and how to get it, balancing study with family obligations, paid labour and other life contingencies, effective use of major student services, and techniques for dealing with the stresses and complications of academic life. Credit will be awarded for successful completion of the course, but no numerical grade will be assigned.
TYP Elective Courses
TYP students are required to choose a contemporary issues course. These elective courses allow students to focus on specialized topics, advanced theories in social science, humanities, or math.
TYP009H1S Literature, Art, and Film
- This course will introduce students to the study of literature, art, and film through a variety of texts from a diverse body of storytellers, filmmakers, visual artists, and performers. Our overall aim is to explore how genre, media, medium, movement, sound, and design interact with the telling of stories, reflecting human experience, expanding our capacity for empathy, and informing our view of the world in this cultural moment. We will consider how meaning is generated, particularly in relation to concepts of gender, race, class, and identity—and we will explore artistic representations of how, when matters have been left unresolved in the past, they continue to speak themselves and to disrupt the present in startling and powerful ways.
TYP016H1: Advanced Quantitative Reasoning
- This half-course is designed to help students improve their ability to think and reason quantitatively, and to improve their problem-solving skills. The course should also help students to overcome any fears that they may have about learning quantitative information because of previous discouragement that they may have encountered in the acquisition of quantitative skills. The first part of the course is devoted to a consolidation of basic mathematics skills; the second part extends these skills in statistical reasoning about information of the sort frequently encountered in social scientific writing.
TYP019H1S - Black Canadian Studies
- Black Canadian experiences contribute to understandings of what it means to be Black in the Diaspora. The course introduces students to the field of Black Canadian Studies by critically exploring and analyzing the links and disjunctures in the cultural, political, and intellectual practices and experiences of people of African descent in Canada. This course stems from the following question: How do Black communities in Canada articulate their presence, survive and thrive within an anti-Black racist Canadian society? Beginning with a critical overview of history, theoretical orientations, and interdisciplinary methodology of the discipline, the course is divided into three thematic units that examine intellectuals, politics, and movements; identity construction and formation; and literary and cultural theories and practices while incorporating a variety of cultural texts including film, literature and music that capture the Black Canadian experiences. The course has been created specifically for students who have little or no academic background in the study of Black Canadian Studies.
TYP020H1S - Plague Literature
- Through an examination of plague-literature (written and oral) emerging from various communities throughout history, this course offers a glimpse of the many faces Hydra shows, reflect upon the fears and fantasies she incites within the communities she infects, and Please note: Recording and dissemination of lectures or class discussions is prohibited 2 consider the communal histories she has altered. In turn, students will reflect upon their reception of and reaction to this historical moment in light of the literature they are surveying and contribute to this ‘canon’ of plague-literature by documenting these reflections and creating their own ‘portrait’ of the 21st century Hydra in a variety of media, including written or digital reflections, written essays, graphic essays, and ‘plague journaling.’
TYP016H1S - Advanced Quantitative Reasoning
- This course is a continuation of the Fall Semester Course, Quantitative Reasoning (TYP005H1 F). We would start with modelling ‘word’ problems into equations, usually elementary algebra equations, and relations into functions defined by formulae. We would follow with methods of solving equations and discuss the properties of the functions. Included are some topics in Trigonometry and Statistics. Emphasis is placed on concepts, definitions, theorems, proofs, and problem solving. The main idea behind the methods of solution is the solution of problems by rules of completion and reduction by Mohammed Ben Musa of Khowarezm –(The Algebra of Mohammed Ben Musa, Edited and Translated by Frederic Rosen, printed by J. L. Cox, Great Queen Street, London).
TYP023H1S - Climate, Technology, Justice
- The use of digital technology for the study of literature, history, and culture has proliferated in recent years. This course engages students in an interdisciplinary discovery of the wide field of digital humanities (DH) scholarship and tools through the lens of environmental impacts and climate crisis. Together, we will explore DH techniques, technologies, and theory while also discussing topics such as pollution, environmental racism, and the effects of climate change. We will approach DH theory from a number of angles, including race and Indigenous studies, gender, and de/anti/post-colonialism. We will weigh the pros and cons of technology by exploring what it allows us to do and at what costs. Finally, we will experiment with prominent DH tools (3D printing, Omeka digital archives, ArcGIS StoryMaps) and reflect on our environmental responsibilities as humans and DH scholars.
FAS Option Courses
TYP students are required to enroll in one of six first-year courses offered through the Faculty of Arts and Science. These courses give TYP students a sense of academic expectations and familiarity an undergraduate course, as well as expose them to different fields of study. Each course is accompanied with a tutorial/ lab AND a TYP seminar to further support students with their studies.
CSE240H1 & CSE270H1: Introduction to Critical Equity and Solidarity Studies | Community (Dis)Engagement and Solidarity
- This course provides an interdisciplinary intersectional interrogation and examination of systemic inequity and social justice in local and global contexts. It provides a foundation for the field of critical equity and solidarity studies through a concentrated focus on theory and practice as it relates to major concepts, historical perspectives, key debates and radical thought and grassroots community resistance to inequity and oppression. CSE240 introduces and foregrounds the concept of critical equity as ‘praxis’, that is to say as both a theoretical framework and as a lived, embodied, angered and passion-driven anti-colonial contestation of [and resistance to] the structural nature and effects of systemic and institutionalized inequity and oppression. Crucially, this course will center and assert a radical understanding of self-defense.
CAR120Y1: Introduction to Caribbean Studies
- Explores the complex and diverse languages, geographies, regional and national histories, cultural practices, intellectual traditions and political and economic landscapes of the Caribbean region, its people and its diasporas. Students will be introduced to the main questions, themes, and debates in Caribbean Studies. Lectures and readings develop the skills to take an interdisciplinary approach to Caribbean Studies.
SOC101H1F: Introduction to Sociology I: Sociological Perspectives
- This course will challenge your views on a wide range of issues that affect us all. It will also excite your interest in a unique sociological way of understanding your world. We will analyze the globalization of culture, emerging patterns of class, race, and gender inequality in Canada and internationally, criminal and deviant behaviour, and so on. You will learn to understand these and other pressing social issues by analyzing the way the social world is organized. These topics are further taken up in the sequel to this course, SOC150: Introduction to Sociology II: Sociological Inquiries.
BIO120H1 & BIO130H1: Adaptation and Biodiversity | Molecular and Cell Biology
-
Principles and concepts of evolution and ecology related to origins of adaptation and biodiversity. Mechanisms and processes driving biological diversification illustrated from various perspectives using empirical and theoretical approaches. Topics include: genetic diversity, natural selection, speciation, physiological, population, and community ecology, maintenance of species diversity, conservation, species extinction, global environmental change, and invasion biology.
INS201H1: Introduction to Indigenous Studies - Foundations
- This course is designed to introduce students to the ideas, methods and themes of the discipline of Indigenous Studies. The course will explore the development of the field of Indigenous Studies in Canada. Topics will include explorations into Indigenous thought, philosophies, knowledge systems, and ways of being. The focus will be on North America with comparative discussions of Indigenous peoples and their experiences from other parts of the world.
INS202H1: Introduction to Indigenous Studies - History & Politics
- This course is designed to introduce students to Indigenous history and politics as they inform the field of Indigenous Studies. The course will provide an overview of the history and politics of Indigenous peoples in Canada. Topics will include Indigenous creation stories, Indigenous treaty-making traditions, settler contact and conflict, history of education, Indigenous rights within the Canadian State and contemporary issues such as food sovereignty, language revitalization, arts, and international relations. The focus will be on North America with comparative discussions of Indigenous peoples and their experiences from other parts of the world.
Seminar Courses
TYP students are required to enroll in one of six first-year courses offered through the Faculty of Arts and Science. Each course is accompanied with a tutorial/ lab AND a TYP seminar (listed below) to further support students with their studies.
TYP051Y1: Introduction to Critical Studies in Equity & Solidarity Seminar
TYP052Y1: Introduction to Sociology Seminar
TYP053Y1: Introduction to Indigenous Studies Seminar
TYP056Y1: Introduction to Caribbean Studies Seminar
TYP057Y1: Biology Seminar