The Study Regulation sets out the full framework governing the BSc in Information Technology programme — from admissions and tuition to examinations, the Thesis Project, internships, student mobility, graduation, and quality assurance. Below is a condensed, chapter-by-chapter overview of all 72 articles. For the complete legal text, download the official document.
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- Institutional Framework (Art. 1–16)
- Structure & Operation of the Programme (Art. 17–37)
- Student Assessment (Art. 38–46)
- Thesis Project (Art. 47–51)
- Internship (Art. 52–59)
- Student Mobility (Art. 60–63)
- Awarding of Degrees (Art. 64–68)
- Evaluation of the Programme (Art. 69–72)
Chapter 1: Institutional Framework
Article 1 — General Principles
- Four-year international undergraduate programme, “Information Technology”, under Law 4957/2022 (Foreign Language Study Programmes)
- Minimum 240 ECTS, leading to a Level 6 qualification (National & European Qualifications Frameworks)
- 60 ECTS per academic year
- All teaching, degrees, and certificates entirely in English
Article 2 — Objectives of the Programme
- Addresses the gap in foreign-language Computer Science/Informatics education in Greek public universities
- Trains IT professionals for global market needs: cloud & pervasive computing, AI & data science, cybersecurity
- Strengthens research, international collaboration, and the University’s outward orientation
- Promotes extensive use of Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) across the curriculum
Article 3 — Content and Academic Outcomes
- Curriculum integrates cloud computing, AI/data science, and cybersecurity with practical/lab-based training
- Graduates can analyze problems and design, implement, and evaluate computing systems
- Learning outcomes include teamwork, HCI analysis, ethical/professional awareness, communication, and project planning
Article 4 — Management of the Programme
- Governed by the HUA Senate, the Study Program Committee (SPC, 7 members), the Program Director, and the Department Assembly
- Administrative/secretarial support provided by the Department Secretary; external collaborators may be hired under supervision
Article 5 — Student Representation
- Students participate via representatives in University and Department governing bodies
- Assemblies/events require prior authorization from the Dean or Rector
Article 6 — Benefits and Services for Students
- Full access to HUA facilities, infrastructure, and services for the duration of studies
- Access to student restaurants and free accommodation under certain conditions, plus transport-related benefits
Article 7 — Student Service Center (SSC)
- Informs students about University operations, rights/obligations, and available services
- Includes Student Welfare Services and the Office of Studies and Career Office (employment/study-continuation counseling)
- Liaises with the Internship Office and international mobility coordination
Article 8 — Students Support Unit (SSU)
- Supports Erasmus and international students throughout their studies (erasmus.hua.gr); provides Greek-language course info
- A dedicated BSc IT support office (under the Program Secretariat) assists with enrolment, residence permits, and student visa procedures (incl. liaison with Greek consulates and authorities)
- Helps with accommodation, health insurance, tuition payment, AFM (tax number), bank accounts, and utilities
- Refers students to the Study in Greece portal for further settlement services
Article 9 — Support Structure for Staff & Students / Innovation Center
- The “Aikaterini Maridaki-Kassotaki” structure provides organized psychological/pedagogical support to staff and students
- The Center for Sustainable and Responsible Innovation and Entrepreneurship promotes socially beneficial research and innovation
Article 10 — Student Ombudsperson & Faculty Advisor for Special Needs
- Student Ombudsperson (SO) mediates between students and faculty/administration (excluding exam/grading matters)
- Faculty Advisor for Students with Special Educational Needs (FASEN) supports inclusion and full participation in University life
Article 11 — Library and Information Center (LIC)
- Reading room, computers, lockers, user-training seminars, borrowing and photocopying services
- Some services available remotely
Article 12 — Language Teaching Center (LTC)
- Offers specialized scientific-language courses for all HUA students
- For international students: Greek language courses at introductory and advanced level, plus other languages
Article 13 — Electronic Services
- Students receive a personal username/password for email, cloud storage, e-learning, and University applications
- Students are responsible for account security, privacy, and their own data backups
- Misuse of electronic services can lead to immediate account deactivation
Article 14 — Provisions for Students with Disabilities / Special Needs
- University maintains accessibility infrastructure (ramps, elevators, designated parking, etc.)
- Staff support uninterrupted participation in academic life
Article 15 — Institutional Awards, Scholarships & Educational Loans
- Merit-based awards/scholarships, funded by donations, sponsorships, bequests, and University income
- Interest-free educational loans may be available under University regulations
- Graduates eligible for postgraduate scholarships via the Spyros Harokopos & Evanthia Harokopou-Petroutsi Foundation
Article 16 — Use of Facilities and Resources
- Students must return facilities/equipment in good condition; damage costs are charged to those responsible
- Special-risk labs/equipment may have additional usage regulations
- Student association events require written Rector approval (request ≥5 days in advance); unauthorized use leads to disciplinary action and repair costs
Chapter 2: Structure & Operation of the Programme
Article 17 — Duration
- Each academic year has two semesters of roughly 12 weeks of instruction
- Course timetables announced two weeks in advance; semester extensions only in exceptional, legally-defined cases
Article 18 — Academic Planning and Timetable
- Academic year runs September 1 – August 31, split into winter and spring semesters (dates set by the Senate)
- Attendance of lectures/labs may be mandatory or optional per PC/School Assembly decision
- A course is considered “not taught” if delivered hours fall below 4/5 of the curriculum requirement
Article 19 — Holidays
- Winter semester: October 28, November 17, Christmas break (Dec 23 – Jan 6), and January 30
- Spring semester: Clean Monday, March 25, Easter break (Holy Monday – St. Thomas Sunday), May Day, and Pentecost
Article 20 — Categories of Candidates
- Category 1: foreign citizens (EU or non-EU) who graduated from high school physically located abroad
- Category 2: graduates of a foreign-curriculum school operating in Greece, provided neither they nor their parents hold Greek citizenship and they attended at least the last two years abroad/at that school full-time
Article 21 — Student Admission & Selection Criteria
- Maximum 50 admissions per year; required documents: application/CV, secondary-education proof, English proficiency (TOEFL iBT 70 / IELTS 6.0 or equivalent), ID/passport, motivation letter
- Three-stage evaluation: qualification screening, ranking by the Application Evaluation Committee (AEC), then interviews
- Criteria include diploma grade, relevant coursework/awards, motivation letter, training/seminars, volunteering, and language certificates
- Selection finalized 3 months before the semester starts; health insurance proof required at each semester’s enrolment
- Tuition fees paid into a Harokopio University Research Committee bank account; first instalment due at enrolment
Article 22 — Enrollment and Student Status
- Minimum 8 semesters; first-year orientation event covers structure, thesis/internship/mobility, and the Academic Advisor system
- Enrolment each semester; elective course registration within the first 2 weeks of teaching
- One course replacement per semester allowed, subject to PC approval
- Extra electives beyond 240 ECTS can be recorded in the Diploma Supplement if not counted toward the degree
Article 23 — Duration of Studies
- Minimum 8 semesters, maximum 10 for full-time students
- Exceeding the maximum results in PC deregistration unless an exceptional extension is granted
- Loss of student status (and all related benefits) once the maximum duration expires
Article 24 — Tuition Fees
- €9,600 per year; €38,400 total for the programme — non-refundable if studies are discontinued
- Paid in 4 instalments: 30% by Sept 5, 25% by Dec 31, 25% by Mar 1, 20% by May 31
- No additional admission or administration fees
- Unpaid fees bar the student from sitting that semester’s exams; fee changes apply only to new academic years (non-retroactive)
Article 25 — Exceptional Extension Beyond Max Duration
- Available for serious health/personal reasons affecting the student or a close relative (parent, spouse, civil partner)
- Application to the PC via the Secretariat with supporting documents (medical certificate, family status certificate); can be renewed if conditions persist
Article 26 — Interruption of Studies
- Up to 2 years total, taken in increments of at least one semester; student status (and rights) suspended during this time
- Application to the PC with reasons and supporting documents; student must return their Academic ID and clear Library/Welfare obligations
- Automatically lifted at the end of the period, or the student may return early via application
Article 27 — Part-Time Studies
- Requires enrolment in at least 2 courses per semester; doubles the overall study duration
- Total tuition stays the same, but per-semester fees are calculated at €160 per ECTS credit enrolled
Article 28 — Content of the Study Programme
- Curriculum defines course titles, content, weekly hours, sequencing, learning outcomes, ECTS, and required staff qualifications
- All courses run on the e-learning platform (e-class) with descriptions, exam procedures, and materials
- Minimum 240 ECTS total, structured as 60 ECTS per academic year; course info published in English
Article 29 — Course Description Guide
- Each course has an analytical guide (activities, type, prerequisites, learning outcomes, content, assessment methods, ECTS, bibliography)
- Maintained by the instructor and approved by the PC; may be completed electronically
Article 30 — Teaching Methods
- All courses taught on-site, in English
- Methods include theoretical lectures, laboratory exercises (optional or compulsory depending on the course), and assignments
Article 31 — Academic Advisor
- Academic Advisors guide and support students through their studies, per the Department’s published Academic Advisor Regulation
Article 32 — Students’ Rights
- Timely information about academic matters, free expression of views within academic freedom
- Right to evaluate teaching, administration, and institutional decisions
- Right to use University facilities, social benefits, and to submit complaints/regrading requests
- Right to representation in collective bodies, participation in student associations, and remunerated University activities
Article 33 — Students’ Obligations
- Stay informed about regulations, the Code of Ethics and Good Practice, and the academic calendar
- Uphold the University’s reputation, respect/protect facilities, and keep premises clean
- Check institutional email regularly and make proper use of electronic services
Article 34 — Complaint Management Regulation
- A dedicated Regulation (published on the UPS website) describes how students can submit complaints and how they are handled
Article 35 — Selection & Obligations of Teaching Staff
- Instructors may include HUA faculty/specialized staff, emeritus professors, collaborating instructors from foreign universities, appointed instructors, visiting professors/researchers, and recognized external scientists
- Teaching assignments decided by the SPC based on the Director’s recommendation, issued before each semester
- Instructors must: stay current in their field, be accessible to students, publish clear course plans, grade and announce results promptly via e-class, supervise theses responsibly, accept evaluation processes, and announce ≥5 thesis topics per period if full-time
Article 36 — Code of Ethics and Good Practice (CEGP)
- Published on the Department website; sets out conduct rules for the whole academic community, including students
Article 37 — Student Violations
- Disciplinary offenses include: compromising exam integrity, plagiarism/IP violations (including unapproved AI-generated assignments), intentional property damage, obstructing University operations, and infringing on others’ personality/diversity
- Governed by applicable legislation and the Code of Student Conduct and Good Practice
Chapter 3: Student Assessment
Article 38 — Examination Periods
- Three exam periods per year: January–February (3 weeks), June (3 weeks), and September (4 weeks); no classes held during these periods
- September period covers both winter and spring semester courses
- Final-year students (8 semesters completed) may, under PC conditions, sit all owed courses in the January–February period
Article 39 — Organization of Examinations
- Exam timetable (date/time/location) announced at least 3 weeks in advance; makeup sessions arranged if an exam can’t proceed
- Written exams capped at 3 hours; instructor must be present throughout
- Grades announced via e-class within 15 days; students can request regrading within 5 days; grade lists submitted to the Secretariat within 20 days
- Exam papers kept for 1 year then destroyed
- After 3 failures in a course, a student may request evaluation by a 3-member committee (excluding the original instructor)
Article 40 — Examination Schedule
- Prepared by a person appointed by the School Assembly; published on the UPS website and emailed to students
Article 41 — Margins of Leniency
- Instructors must accommodate documented learning difficulties
- Exam/thesis grades rounded to the nearest whole number
- Maximum lab absence allowed is 20% of total sessions; exceeding this excludes the student from the lab component of assessment
Article 42 — Regrading
- Students may review their exam papers and request regrading within 5 days of results being announced, before grades are entered into the system
Article 43 — Midterm Examinations (Progress Tests)
- Optional in courses without a lab component; timing and weighting toward the final grade must be announced in the first week of classes
Article 44 — Assignments
- May be mandatory or optional, individual or group-based; schedule announced in week 1 and never due during exam periods
- Instructors check for originality/plagiarism and may opt for oral examination on the assignment
- Substitute assignments may replace final exams, but a September exam or new assignment must remain available for those who need it
Article 45 — Recognition of Courses
- Students may request recognition of courses already passed at another institution, exempting them from re-examination
- Granted by the PC following a request and instructor recommendation
Article 46 — Grading
- Final grades use a 0–10 whole-number scale (midterms/assignments may use non-integer grades)
- Minimum passing grade: 5
Chapter 4: Thesis Project
Article 47 — General Framework and Purpose
- Mandatory in the final (8th) semester, worth 15 ECTS, completed individually
- Combines literature review, development, and evaluation of a system, tool, or methodology aligned with the Department’s research areas
- Serves as preparation for future professional/research careers in IT
Article 48 — Assignment
- Assigned to students in their 7th semester or later with at most 2 mandatory courses outstanding (up to the 5th semester)
- Topics published in the first 10 days of October/March; each full-time instructor must propose at least 5 topics per period
- Projects may be done in collaboration with external organizations (TPCO), or proposed by students with a supervisor’s agreement
- Final assignment made by the PC, which also appoints a 3-member advisory/examination committee; max 2 students per project
Article 49 — Completion and Structure
- Written in English; equivalent to ~3 man-months of effort
- Must cover: problem definition, methodology, process description, final result/product, and evaluation
- One-semester extension possible via PC decision; missing the deadline or failing evaluation requires a new topic
- Required structure: cover page, acknowledgments, English summary (≤1 page), table of contents, list of figures/tables, introduction, main body chapters, conclusions, appendices, glossary, and bibliography
Article 50 — Evaluation and Defense
- Final document submitted to the 3-member committee at least 15 days before the defense
- Public defense: 20-minute presentation plus committee questions, possibly via videoconference
- Grade = average of the three examiners’ grades; failure means revision and a repeat defense, or a new thesis if it fails again
- Successful theses must be submitted to the HUA Library afterward
Article 51 — Intellectual Property and Plagiarism
- Governed by the Department/University Code of Academic Integrity
- For TPCO projects, IP and confidentiality terms may be set in a separate private agreement
Chapter 5: Internship
Article 52 — General Provisions
- Internships (Practical Training) can be undertaken at public, private, or international host organizations, in Greece or abroad, under instructor supervision
- Formalized via an Internship Agreement between the University, student, and host organization; ECTS credits awarded on successful completion
Article 53 — Purpose
- Gives students real work experience and professional IT skills, strengthening links between the programme and the labor market
Article 54 — Timing and Duration
- Dates set annually by the PC in line with School Assembly decisions
Article 55 — Organization and Supervision
- School Assembly appoints an Internship Committee, Appeals Committee, Departmental Coordinator, and Academic Supervisors
- Coordinator sources positions, assesses host organizations, and ranks/evaluates interns at the end
- Academic Supervisors act as liaison between the University and host organizations, monitoring student compliance and resolving issues
Article 56 — Internship Host Organizations
- Can include public services, private/public legal entities, NGOs, and international organizations, in Greece or abroad
- Host organizations appoint a supervisor and submit evaluation documentation at the end of the internship
Article 57 — Selection Criteria for Interns
- Eligible: 8th-semester students owing no more than 4 courses (up to the 6th semester); applicants rank 3 preferred positions
- Ranking based on a selection coefficient combining percentage of courses completed and average grade; ties broken by lab course grades, then lottery
- The Internship Committee matches students to positions; rejected students fall back to their 2nd/3rd choice
Article 58 — Rights and Obligations of Interns
- 5% of positions reserved for students with serious illnesses (valid Medical Committee Certificate required)
- Interns must follow host organization safety and workplace rules; violations can terminate the internship
- At completion, interns must submit an activity log, evaluation questionnaires, and a final activity report
Article 59 — Insurance and Remuneration
- Students are mandatorily covered against occupational accidents during the internship
- Covered by the host organization or the University, at no extra cost to the student
Chapter 6: Student Mobility
Article 60 — General Provisions on Student Mobility
- Students may take part in domestic or international mobility (European programmes, bilateral agreements, internal mobility)
- The Department’s Mobility Coordination Committee defines ECTS recognition procedures
Article 61 — Selection Criteria for Outgoing Students
- Eligible after completing the first year of studies, subject to each mobility programme’s specific requirements
- Selection results and criteria published on the UPS and Mobility Office websites
- Students must get their planned activities and ECTS equivalences approved by the PC before departure
Article 62 — Rights of Students Participating in Mobility
- Possible exemption from host-university tuition/fees for registration, exams, labs, and library access
- Full academic recognition at HUA for activities completed abroad, per the Learning Agreement
- Receive a transcript of records from the host institution; equal treatment to local students
- Can retain home-country scholarships/loans while abroad
Article 63 — Student Mobility – Information
- The Department, Career Office, and Erasmus Office inform students about all available mobility agreements
- Mobility opportunities published on the UPS website and presented during freshman orientation
Chapter 7: Awarding of Degrees
Article 64 — Degree Classification
- Degree grade is a weighted average of all course grades (weights set by the School Assembly), rounded to 2 decimals
- Classifications: Excellent (8.45–10.00), Very Good (6.95–8.44), Good (5.00–6.94)
Article 65 — Completion of Studies / Graduation
- Degree title: “BSc in Information Technology”
- Graduate status achieved once all required courses are passed and 240 ECTS accumulated
- Graduation date is the end of the relevant exam period, or the Thesis Project defense date if applicable
- A certificate of completion in English is available to graduates
Article 66 — Degree Award & Graduation Ceremony
- Degrees awarded within 3 months of completing studies; ceremonies held after the June, September, and January–February exam periods (announced ≥3 weeks ahead)
- Graduates must submit a graduation application and clear any pending financial obligations
- An oath is recited at the ceremony by the highest-ranked graduate; attendance isn’t mandatory for completion but is normally required for degree issuance (exceptions possible for special reasons)
- Degree issued in English: 2 certified copies plus 2 transcripts, signed by the Rector, Department Head, Programme Director, and Secretary
Article 67 — Diploma Supplement
- Free supplement issued in Greek and English describing the nature, level, and content of completed studies — without evaluative judgments or equivalence statements
- Optional specializations (each requiring 4 specialization courses): Data Management, Systems & Application Development, or Information Systems & Technology Management
- Includes student identity, programme details (with ECTS), internship/thesis info, grading scale, and further opportunities
Article 68 — Digital Certificates of Degrees via gov.gr
- Degree certificates can be issued digitally via ptyxia.gov.gr
- The same platform allows verification of a degree’s authenticity
Chapter 8: Evaluation of the Programme
Article 69 — General Provisions
- Annual evaluation by students and faculty via questionnaires; programme reviewed/updated yearly by the School Assembly
- End-of-semester evaluation covers academic profile, programme structure, teaching quality, faculty qualifications, research integration, market demand, and support services
- Anonymous, mandatory student evaluations cover course objectives, materials, instructor engagement/accessibility, organization, and exam criteria — plus free-text feedback
- Internship and Thesis Project evaluations are also mandatory; the Quality Assurance Unit publishes an annual results summary with strengths, weaknesses, and corrective measures
Article 70 — Monitoring Student Progress
- After each exam period, the Quality Assurance Unit reports pass rates, average grades, and repeat-failure statistics to the School Assembly
- Similar statistics are kept for internships, theses, and mobility, informing ongoing programme improvements
Article 71 — Program Revision
- Every 2 years, the PC reviews the strategic plan, evaluation results, external reviews, and labor-market trends, then proposes changes to the School Assembly
- Major changes (e.g. course additions/removals) include transitional arrangements for existing students
- Approved changes go through the University Quality Assurance Office and Senate; updated Study and ECTS Guides are published in English and Greek
- Minor changes (syllabus updates, course renaming) follow a lighter version of the same approval chain
Article 72 — Other Matters
- Any matters not covered by legislation, University regulations, or this Regulation are resolved by decisions of the School Assembly