Biola_Catalog_19890101NA

16 ADMISSION

REGISTRATION GRADUATION REQUIREMENTS

time, both the first and the second grades figure into the total cumulative grade point average computation. Grades reports will be issued to students from the Registrar's office.

GRADES (Graduate students should see the appropriate section of the catalog for further grade information.) Quality of course work is graded on the following scale, with a system of grade points used to determine a student's general grade point average or standing:

Registrar's Office Extension 5504

GRADE CHANGES It is the student's responsibility to bring any error in grades to the attention of the instructor within one semester following the issued grade. Grade changes are only allowable for computational or recording errors and must be corrected no later than the last day of classes of the next full term semester. AUDITORS Students wishing to audit must pursue normal appli­ cation and registration procedures. Undergraduate students cannot register for a course until the second week of the semester. (See·financial information for fees.) Talbot students must be college graduates and must pay the same fees as those taking courses for cred­ it. Auditors must receive permission from the instruc­ tors of the courses to be audited. A course taken for audit cannot be repeated for credit at a later date. PRE-REGISTRATION Pre-registration for the fall semester is held during the month of May, and for the spring semester in late November and early December. All students are required to preregister if they plan to return to school the next semester. Failure to preregister will mean filing an application for re-admission ($35 fee) if the 'individual plans to enroll for the next semester. ACADEMIC LOAD The minimum full-time load is 12 units at the under­ graduate level. A student who is on academic probation may be limited to 12 units or less depending upon his grade point average. A minimum of ten units must be taken by those living on campus. The minimum full-time load is nine units for those in graduate degree programs. Those carrying less than the full-time load are considered part-time students. A Talbot student is normally permitted to carry a maxi­ mum of 18 units each semester. The normal full-time load for a Rosemead student is 12 to 15 hours per semester, but not less than nine hours. Without the advisor's approval, a student may not carry over 16 units in any semester. Part-time registra­ tion of less than nine units is permitted only after a student has been admitted to candidacy. Rosemead does not admit part-time students to its degree programs. A unit of credit is generally considered to consist of one class hour (50 minutes) a week for a semester. In physical education activities, laboratory sessions and in a few other instances, a unit of credit may involve more than one class period a week.

Grade

Quality

Grade Points:

A Highest Passing Grade 4.00 A3.67 B+ 3.33 B Good 3.00 B2.67 C+ 2.33 C Satisfactory 2.00 C1.67 D+ 1.33 D 1.00 D- Lowest Passing Grade 0.67 (for undergraduate courses) F Failure 0.00

A credit "CR" indicates the completion of course work with academic performance equal to or higher than the "satisfactory'' standard for the degree program (normally "C" 2.00 for undergraduate programs and "B" 3.00 for graduate programs.) A ''W" indicates and official withdrawal from a course and does not affect the student's grade point average. A "UW" indicates an unofficial withdrawal. Students who register for courses but do not attend classes are given the grade of "UW'' which will influence the grade point average the same as an "F." A temporary rpark of "RD" (report delayed) will be issued in special cases when approved by the dean of school of arts and sciences (undergraduate students) and the deans of the respective schools (graduate students). The grade point average of a student is obtained by dividing the total number of units attempted at Biola University into the total number of grade points obtained at Biola. (This calculation starts anew when a student receiving a baccalaureate degree at this institu­ tion subsequently enters a graduate program.) To graduate with a baccalaureate degree, a student must have at least twice as many grade points as units in total credit value of all courses undertaken at Biola (2.00 grade point average) and a 2.00 grade point average in the major field. Higher standards are required for grad­ uate degrees, as stated elsewhere in this catalog. A student will be permitted to repeat a course in which either a D or an F grade was earned. Courses in which grades earned were either C or B, may be repeated only with approval from the Registrar's office. The grades processor in the Registrar's office must be notified when a course is repeated. When a course is repeated where a student has received a D or F grade the first time, the better grade is the only one used in co~puting the cumulative grade point average, and the uruts are counted only once. When a course is repeated where a student has received a C or B grade the first

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