Indeed, a standard 3-credit University course here in Canada usually lasts one semester (i.e. spans the full four months), has lecture and lab and/or tutorial components, has 1-3 midterm exams, has weekly homework assignments, demands at least 2.5 times the study time per week as the the lecture time per week (which is usually 3 hours of lectures), and has a final examination.
How many of these courses do students typically take per semester? 5.
Engineering students normally take 6. Everybody else (with the exception of a science student) goes

when he/she hears that.
In Engineering Physics (my program) the standard fare is 7 courses per semester. I'm in third year. This semester mine are:
-Applications of Classical Mechanics (Lagrangian Dynamics)
-Introduction to Electricity and Magnestism (Maxwell's Equations etc)
-Introduction to Laboratory Techniques (Physics lab. The labs I did were gyroscopes, NMR, gamma ray spectroscopy, and alpha particle range in air. There are others too...superconductors, tranmissions line, servos, etc. ).
-Digital Logic Design
-Circuits Analysis I*
-Ordinary Differential Equations*
-Programming and Data Structures for Engineers (i.e. comp sci with C++

)*
Courses with * indicate courses I should have had finished by second year, but couldn't because I transferred directly into Engineering Physics in my second year from wimpy general sciences in first year. In place of the * courses, I should actually be doing Partial Differential Equations, some sort of EECE course in discrete data structures/algorithms, and another math course (Complex Analysis). I should be up to speed by next semester. Keep in mind that I'm taking
three math courses next semester, the Partial Differential Equations, the Complex Variable Theory, and Probability with Physical Applications.
The point of all of this is that seven courses are not totally unheard of, and many of my friends are taking on eight. Nine courses is pretty much the upper limit (some will attempt it), and ten sounds insane, and probably exceeds the credit limit. Engineering Physics is, however, the hardest eng. program, and one of my physics profs commented that she figured we probably just got burnt out, whereas the pure honours physics students had more time to let things sink in, and indulge their scientific curiosity. I agree with the burnt out part 100%