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The program was exclusive for Saudi male students until Saudi Aramco announced it will give scholarships to female students during Summer-2006. For the Academic Year 2006–2007 251 males and 56 females were accepted in the program. For the Academic Year 2009-2010, 182 males and 43 females were accepted in the program.
Qualifying Course: A training program of more than a month to less than a year, and the number of training hours of which is more than (60) hours. Developmental Course: A training program of no more than one month's duration, and the number of training hours of which does not exceed (60) hours. [1]
Thus, in trimester-based colleges, one completes 9 courses in the academic year (3 courses x 3 trimesters) relative to the 8 courses typical in a semester-based system (4 courses x 2 semesters). Some schools that operate summer session are sometimes referred to as having "trimesters", with the summer session being the third annual session.
Also, keep the federal and college deadlines in mind as you renew or reapply for the FAFSA. If you miss a deadline, you risk not being eligible for financial aid for the upcoming academic year.
An elective course is one chosen by a student from a number of optional subjects or courses in a curriculum, as opposed to a required course which the student must take. While required courses (sometimes called "core courses" or "general education courses") are deemed essential for an academic degree, elective courses tend to be more specialized.
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In 1959, Aramco sent the first group of Saudi students to college in the States. In 1970, Aramco started hiring its first high school graduates, and in 1979 started offering college scholarships. In 1965, Zafer H. Husseini was named the first Saudi manager and in 1974, Faisal Al-Bassam was named the first Saudi vice president.