Annual Course Schedule

The Graduate Centre for Academic Communication (GCAC) ​offers a wide range of free non-credit courses throughout the academic year. Most of our courses have ten to twelve hours of class contact time (two hours a week for five to six weeks), plus office hours and/or tutorials. GCAC offers five course sessions during the academic year, and each has its own registration date. In addition to classroom instruction, students receive individualized feedback on their written or oral work.​

Some of our courses are discipline-specific, while others target the different needs of native and non-native speakers of English. Our short courses build upon one another; this modular design enables students to create a program of study that will address their individual needs.

All students enrolled in a graduate degree program at U of T are eligible to register. Since demand exceeds supply, we request that students take any given course only once a year, with the exception of the proposal writing courses which may be taken in both the Spring and the Fall.​​​

To remain up-to-date on registration information, please join our Listserv.

Current Term’s Courses        
Registration & Attendance Policies

​​​​​2024-2​025 S​​chedule​

May/June 2024 – Registration opened at 10am ET on Tuesday April 23
August 2024 – Registration opened at 10am ET on Tuesday June 11
September 2024 – Registration will open 10am ET on Tuesday August 20

​Full course titles can be found immediately below the chart. Some courses are division specific, as indicated in the course title and/or description.  The ​divisional breakdown is as follows: Division 1 – Humanities, Division 2 – Social Sciences, Division 3 – Physical Sciences, and Division 4 – Life Sciences.

May/JuneAugustSeptembe​rOctober/November January February/March
ACSACS IntACSTBATBATBA
CIHRCIHRGW1
GW1NSERCGW2
GW2SSHRCOPS
NPPPRE
NSERC
OPS
PRE
SSHRC

​​​​​Course Titles​​​

Click on the course title for the course description

​​​ACS – Academic Conversation Skills (for non-native speakers of English)
​​​ACS Int – Academic Conversation Skills Intensive (for new students who are non-native speakers of English)
AG – Advanced Grammar for Multilingual Graduate Writers
CIHR – Writing CIHR Proposals
GW1 – Graduate Writing 1: Establishing Your Foundation
GW2 – Graduate Writing 2: Deepening Your Expertise
ISJ – Introduction to Science Journalism
NPP – Navigating the Publishing Process
NSERC – Writing NSERC Proposals
​​OPS – Oral Presentation Skills (for native and non-native speakers of English)
​​OPS Mod – Oral Presentation Skills Modular Course
PRE – Prewriting Strategies for Developing and Organizing Your Ideas (All Divisions​)
RA 3/4 – Understanding the Research Article: Reading towards Writing (Divisions 3 and 4)
​SSHRC – Writing SSHRC Proposals (Humanities and Social Sciences)
​SSHRC MA – Writing SSHRC Proposals for Master’s Students (Humanities and Social Sciences)
TH 1/2 – Thesis Writing in the Humanities and Social Sciences (Divisions 1 and 2)
​TH 3/4 – Thesis Writing in the Physical and Life Sciences (Divisions 3 and 4)