registrar's office
current information
Fall 2008 Final Exam Schedule
Spring 2009 Registration Information
Academic changes as of september 1, 2005
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19.5 KB, 2 pages)
important dates
Spring 2009 Semester begins on January 12!
Arriving later than January 12, 2009
Fall and Spring semesters refund schedule:
Calendar days 1-7: 100% refund, no academic penalty
Calendar days 8-21: 50% refund, no academic penalty
Calendar days 22-35: 25% refund, no academic penalty
Calendar day 36 and later: 0% refund, receive a grade of WF (withdrawn-fail)
Summer semester refund schedule:
Day 1 of classes: 100% refund, no academic penalty
Calendar days 2-7: 50% refund, no academic penalty
Calendar day 8 and later: 0% refund, receive a grade of WF (withdrawn-fail)
forms
For Students
For Faculty
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graduation requirements
For students who entered in fall 2002 and later
- Complete the core curriculum requirements
- Complete the major requirements
- Earn a total of at least 172 semester credit hours
- Maintain a minimum cumulative GPA of 7.00
- Maintain a minimum GPA of 7.00 in the major*
- Earn no 5s in the 16 major courses*
- Complete the minimum upper-division requirements of 56 credits
- Complete a final project during the last year
- Complete all program requirements within a seven year period
*revisions as of July 1, 2003
no prerequisites for selecting Business major
For students who entered prior to fall 2002
- Complete the core curriculum requirements
- Complete the major requirements
- Earn a total of at least 172 semester credit hours
- Maintain a minimum cumulative GPA of 7.00
- Maintain a minimum GPA of 7.50 in the major
- Complete the minimum upper-division requirements of 56 credits
- Complete a major project during the last year
- Complete all program requirements within a seven year period
*8 is required in College Algebra, Financial Accounting, Business Statistics for Business majors
Note: Students who entered prior to fall 2002 may choose either set of graduation requirements, which ever set is better for them. They must, however, understand that they cannot select only certain components of either one.
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