Program choice
Level 1
Minor only
University
South Ural State University (national research university)
Ranking positions
Program choice
Level 1
Minor only
Course choice
Level 2
Distribution requirements ("M of N")
The official page confirms SUSU's full Russian legal name, English name, abbreviated names, and main address in Chelyabinsk.
Used to identify the new catalog record and distinguish the main organization from additional education sites.
The official page describes the minor as a block of disciplines outside the main field of study: three courses of 4 credits each, 12 credits in total.
The page explicitly connects the minor with student choice and additional competences, and links to minor catalogues for 2021-2025.
This is the main basis for programChoice = 1 because the minor is a structured additional specialization while the main program remains fixed.
The Minor Catalogue 2025-2026 contains many thematic minors with three-course sequences, departments, supervisors, exclusions for some fields, and expected qualifications.
The catalogue confirms that the SUSU minor is not a single facultative or isolated course but a regular set of structured trajectories.
The Univeris information page states that first-year students whose curriculum includes a minor enroll in minors through the student account and mobile app.
Students choose up to five minors and rank them by priority; enrollment is based on the rating system, and the minor cannot be changed after the enrollment order.
The source confirms the operational selection mechanism and the minor's required status for curricula where it is included.
The 2025 bachelor's curriculum confirms the fixed Unmanned Aerial Vehicles profile and a 4-year duration.
Its elective block includes module 1.F.05 Minor worth 12 credits in semesters 3-5, and it also has a separate facultative block.
The curriculum formally confirms that the minor can be part of the required curriculum structure, but the choice remains package-based and structured, so courseChoice is rated 2 rather than a free catalogue of individual courses.
The official plan card shows field 24.03.04, the Unmanned Aerial Vehicles profile, full-time mode, and a standard 4-year duration.
Used to cross-check the PDF curriculum metadata and confirm that the profile is fixed within the specific educational program.
The 2025 bachelor's curriculum confirms a 4-year duration and the fixed Ecology and Environmental Management profile.
It contains program-defined elective disciplines worth 7 credits and separate facultatives; this checked plan does not list a minor.
The plan shows that SUSU's flexibility is not free main-program switching: part of the choice remains inside a specific educational program.
The official plan card confirms field 05.03.06, full-time mode, bachelor's level, the Ecology and Environmental Management profile, and a standard 4-year duration.
Used as a second checked program for evaluating standard duration and fixed-profile structure.
The current 2025 plan card shows another bachelor's program with a fixed IT Engineering profile and a 4-year duration.
It broadens the check beyond engineering and natural-science examples and confirms that the main program is selected as a specific field and profile.
This official study-plan list page shows specialist programs, including Customs, with durations up to 6 years.
Together with checked 4-year full-time bachelor's plans, it is used for the 4-6 year duration range.
The regulation describes transfer from one educational program to another through attestation, academic differences, an individual schedule for resolving them, and available places.
A substantial academic difference may lead to transfer to a lower year, which indicates administrative transfer rather than regular main-specialty choice after a common core.
This is the key negative source against programChoice = 2.
The official documents section hosts the regulation on readmission and transfer within the educational organization and other local acts.
Used to verify the current official origin of the transfer regulation and to search for rules affecting main-program choice.