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Natural Science and Mathematics
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College of Natural Science and MathematicsAcademic Regulations
| Graduate Course Load |
With approval of the instructor and the graduate advisor, graduate students may drop courses; however, they must adhere to the deadlines published by the university in the Academic Calendar.
Graduate students may hold an assistantship for no more than three years in pursuit of a master's degree, no more than five years in pursuit of a doctoral degree, and a combined total of no more than six years. Faculty consider such factors as the steady progress toward the completion of an advanced degree and the quality of performance of assigned duties in determining the continued assignment of an assistantship. The college grants exceptions to these policies only in rare circumstances, and these exceptions depend solely upon the written petition of a department chair with the approval of both the dean of the college and the dean of Graduate and Professional Studies.
Graduate assistants will normally be limited to a 50 percent appointment, which usually entails service for no more than an average of 20 hours per week, including time spent in preparation, in the classroom and laboratory, in reading papers and examinations, and in any combination of these or other activities as assigned. In rare instances, assistants may receive up to a 75 percent appointment with the stipend increased and the required course load decreased proportionately. Approval of these deviations must be justified on an individual basis, involve an exceptional set of circumstances, and receive the consent of both the dean of the college and the dean of Graduate and Professional Studies. Teaching Fellows (graduate students teaching a course for credit) must have completed a minimum of 18 semester hours in graduate credit in their teaching field, must be in good standing and must be making satisfactory progress toward the degree. The Teaching Fellow may be listed as the instructor of record.
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