F-Term U of T Engineering exams will be held between December 9 to December 20, 2022. Please note that the Faculty will hold exams on Saturdays, Sundays and evenings during this period.
Exams for courses offered by other Faculties may be held during other periods. Please review the other Faculties exam schedule if you are taking courses outside of U of T Engineering.
The Faculty of Arts & Science F-Term exams and Y-Term midterms will be held between December 10 to December 20, 2022.
The University will be closed from December 21 to 30, 2022 for the Winter Break. The University will re-open on Jan. 2 and return to regular hours.
We wish you a relaxing and cheerful holiday season! Enjoy your break!
For more important dates, visit sessional dates.
January 7, 2023, is the emergency winter exam date for the Fall 2022 final exams. The Faculty will use this date for any cancelled December Exams.
For more information, visit sessional dates.
Lectures begin for S-Term courses and resume for Y-Term courses at U of T Engineering and Arts & Science. We hope you had an enjoyable and restful winter break!
For more information, visit sessional dates.
Are you interested in joining clubs at U of T Engineering? Check out the Winter Clubs Fair on January 11 from 12 to 2 p.m. in GB202!
Hosted by the Engineering Society for Godiva Week, come out to learn more about the affiliated clubs, how to join and see their achievements from the first semester. Representatives from some of the over 80 affiliated clubs will be there!
Solve computation problems in the field of AI and machine learning in this 24-hour, virtual competition. Open to all Engineering and Computer Science students. Bring your team of one to three!
Sponsored by Gary Saarenvirta (EngSci 8T8) and his company Daisy Intelligence. The winners will be awarded cash prizes. Register for the hackathon by Jan. 5.
There will be an optional prep session online on Jan. 11.
UTEK is an annual two-day competition that gives undergraduate students the opportunity to use their classroom education to discuss and solve real engineering problems. These range from design problems to case competitions!
This competition encourages collaboration, teamwork, creativity and ingenuity among students.
The top teams will then go on to represent U of T at the the Ontario Engineering Competition (OEC) and the Canadian Engineering Competition (CEC).
The U of T Google Developers Student Club (GDSC) is hosting a “Capture the Flag” Competition where you will put your cybersecurity knowledge to the test and gain insight into the cybersecurity industry from experts.
Register to compete in security-oriented challenges for the chance to win $300 and listen to talks from U of T and Industry experts! All U of T students, no matter their skill level, are welcome to participate.
This is the last day that first-year students can transfer out of Engineering Science and into Track One or a Core 8 engineering program.
For more information, visit sessional dates.