'Aegrotat': is/was this term in use at your university?

Sorry, just found out that Gortat is in fact Polish.

Yes, I’ve heard of it. Although to get an ægrotat degree is accounted a great misfortune and is not exactly setting you up for a bright future.

It’s one of those terms that I’ve heard of, but didn’t know the exact meaning of. (Have attended 4 different Canadian universities and 1 in the US, so have no idea where I picked it up.)

“Air-gro” or “Ay-gro”, are the closest to the two variants I know.

Yes, we use it at the UK university where I work. Last used in the summer degree ceremonies where an aegrotat degree was given to a student who’d died of testicular cancer earlier that year. He was only four months away from graduation when he passed away.

In the US, we had concept called “incomplete” which sounds similar. An instructor could give a grade of “Incomplete” if seriously extenuating circumstances such as hospitalization or being recalled for military service interfered with your ability to complete all of the course requirements. Incompletes were not given just for not getting everything done by the last day of the course.

Incomplete grades were for the course only (you couldn’t graduate with an Incomplete degree), and you weren’t exempted from the rest of the requirements, you just got some extra time to complete them. Once you turned in everything or the extended deadline passed, your grade would be updated to a final grade.

Canadian, went to University of Toronto in the 90s. Never heard the term before, but it may well have been in use - I just never ran across it.

Edit: I looked it up - it is in use.

http://www.undergrad.engineering.utoronto.ca/Office_of_the_Registrar/Petitions.htm

Thanks everyone for the responses. It appears that it’s a term restricted to the Commonwealth.

Further confirming my New Zealand University used it, but I first encountered it used when one of my friends was sick during exams at High School (13-17 year olds). Had to look up what it meant then.

I heard the term when I did my undergrad (University of Toronto, 1970s-80s). I haven’t heard it since.

Given that it is from Latin, not English, it seems quite possible that it used in some non-English-speaking countries, especially in Europe. All that the thread has established, I think, is that it not used an the United States (and probably not Canada).