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Students
are expected to familiarize themselves with the academic policies contained in
this Catalog. Failure to do so does not excuse students from the requirements
and regulations described herein.
The Unit Course System
Instruction at Lycoming College is organized,
with few exceptions, on a departmental basis. Most courses are unit courses,
meaning that each course taken is considered to be equivalent to four semester
hours of credit. Exceptions occur in applied music and theatre practicum
courses, which are offered for either one-half or one semester hour of credit,
and in departments that have elected to offer certain courses for the equivalent
of one, two or three semester hours of credit. Furthermore, independent studies
and internships carrying two semester hours of credit may be designed.
The normal student course load is four unit
courses (16 semester hours) during the fall and spring semesters. Students who
elect to attend the special sessions may enroll in one unit course (four
semester hours) during the May term and one or two unit courses (four - eight
semester hours) in each of the summer terms. A student is considered full time
when enrolled for a minimum of three unit courses, or the equivalent, during the
fall or spring semesters, one unit course, or the equivalent, for the May term,
and two unit courses for each of the summer terms.
Students may enroll in five unit courses
(20 semester hours) during the fall and spring semesters if they are Lycoming
scholars or were admitted to the Dean’s List at the end of the previous
semester. There will be an additional charge. (See page
13.) Exceptions may be
granted by the Dean of the College. Overloads are not permitted during the May
and summer terms.
ALTERNATIVE
CREDIT SOURCES
Transfer Credit
Matriculated students who wish to study at other
campuses must obtain prior written approval to do so from their advisor, the
chair of the department in which the credit will be awarded, and the Lycoming
College Registrar. Course work counting toward a major or minor must also be
approved in advance by the chair-person of the department in which the major or
minor is offered. Once a course is approved, the credit and grades for the
course will be transferred to Lycoming and calculated in the student’s grade
point average as if the courses were taken here. This means that "D"
and "F" grades will be transferred as well as all other grades.
Unapproved courses will not transfer. Final determination of transfer credit
will be made by the Registrar based on official transcripts only.
Students are expected to complete their last
eight unit courses (32 semester hours), and 16 semester hours in their major at
Lycoming. Requests for waivers of this regulation must be sent to the Committee
on Academic Standards.
Credit By Examination
Students may earn credit or advanced placement
through the standardized examinations listed below. A maximum of 50 percent of
the course requirements for the Baccalaureate degree may be earned through these
examinations. The appropriate academic department will determine which tests
they will accept and the course equivalencies. A list of approved examinations
is available in the Office of the Registrar. Although these examinations may be
taken after matriculation, new students who are competent in a given area are
encouraged to take the examination of their choice before entering Lycoming so
that the college will have the test scores available for registration advising
for the first semester of enrollment. Students applying to the college for the
first time should inform the Admissions Office that they have completed these
tests and provide the official scores as part of their application packet.
Continuing students must send official test scores to the Office of the
Registrar and inform their academic advisors when examinations have been taken.
The College Entrance Examination Board Advanced Placement
(CEEB AP) - In most cases, a score of four is
required for credit.
The International Baccalaureate
- Students who have completed the full diploma and have scores of five or above
on the higher level examinations will be granted 32 credit hours; specific
courses will be based on the examinations taken. Students who complete the full
diploma but earn less than a score of five on all of the higher level
examinations will be granted eight credits for each higher level examination
completed with a grade of five or higher and four credits for a satisfactory or
higher completion of the Theory of Knowledge requirement. Students who have
completed the certificate will be granted credit based on the examinations
taken. Subsidiary examinations will not be considered.
The American College Testing Proficiency Examination
Program (ACT PEP) - A score equivalent to a grade
of "B" or above is required.
College Level Examination Program (CLEP)
- A score equivalent to a grade of "B" or above is required.
Defense Activity for Non-Traditional Education Support
(DANTES)
- A score equivalent to a grade of "B" or above is required.
Student Records
The policy regarding student educational records
is designed to protect the privacy of students against unwarranted intrusions
and is consistent with Section 43B of the General Education Provision Act
(commonly known as the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974, as
amended). The details of the College policy on student records and the
procedures for gaining access to student records are contained in the current
issue of the Student Handbook, which is available in the library and the
Office of the Dean of Student Affairs.
Registration
During the registration period, students select
their courses for the next semester and register their course selections in the
Office of the Registrar. Course selection is made in consultation with the
student’s faculty advisor in order to insure that the course schedule is
consistent with College requirements and student goals. After the registration
period, any change in the student’s course schedule must be approved by both
the faculty advisor and Office of the Registrar. Students may not receive credit
for courses in which they are not formally registered.
During the first five days of classes, students
may drop any course without any record of such enrollment appearing on their
permanent record, and they may add any course that is not closed. The permanent
record will reflect the student’s registration as of the conclusion of the
drop/add period. Students wishing to withdraw from a course between the fifth
day and the 9th week of classes must process a withdrawal form in the Office of
the Registrar. Withdrawal grades are not computed in the grade point average.
Students may not withdraw from courses after the 9th week of a semester and the
comparable period during the May and summer terms. Students who stop attending a
course (or courses) but do not withdraw will receive a grade (s) of
"F."
In zero semester hour and two semester hour (1/2
unit) courses meeting only during the last half of any semester, students may
drop/add for a period of five days, effective with the mid-term date shown on
the academic calendar. Withdrawal from zero-credit and half-semester courses
with a withdrawal grade may occur within 4-1/2 weeks of the beginning of the
course. It is understood that the period of time at the beginning of the
semester will be identical, for example, a period of five days as indicated
above.
Cross Registration
A special opportunity exists in the Williamsport
area for students to take courses at the Pennsylvania College of Technology.
Students may enroll for less than a full-time course load at Penn College while
remaining enrolled in courses at Lycoming.
Students must be enrolled full-time in a degree
program and have earned no more than 93 semester hours. Cross registration is
available for the Fall and Spring Semesters, and Summer I and II. It is not
available for May Term.
NON-DEGREE Students
Students who do not wish to pursue a degree at
Lycoming College may, if space permits, register for credit or audit courses on
either a part-time or full-time basis. Students who register for less than 12
semester hours are considered to be enrolled part-time; students who register
for 12 or more semester hours are considered to be enrolled full-time and must
pay the $200 contingency fee.
Anyone wishing to register as a non-degree
student must fill out an application form in the Admissions Office, pay a
one-time application fee and pay the tuition rate in effect at the time of each
enrollment. After a non-degree student has attempted four unit courses (16
semester hours), the student must either matriculate or obtain permission from
the Dean of the College to continue study on a non-degree basis.
All non-degree students are subject to the
general laws and regulations of the College as stated in the College Catalog
and the Student Handbook. The College reserves the right to deny
permission to register individuals who do not meet the standards of the College.
Students who wish to change from a non-degree to
a degree status must apply for admission as a degree candidate and satisfy all
conditions for admission and registration in effect at that time.
Auditors
Any person may audit courses at Lycoming at
one-fourth tuition per course. Members of the Lycoming College Scholar Program
may audit a fifth unit course per semester at no additional charge. Laboratory
and other special fees must be paid in full. Examinations, papers, and other
evaluation devices are not required of auditors, but individual arrangements may
be made to complete such exercises with consent of the instructor. The option to
audit a course must be declared by the end of the drop/add period. Forms are
available in the Registrar's Office.
Attendance
The academic program at Lycoming is based upon
the assumption that there is value in class attendance for all students.
Individual instructors have the prerogative of establishing reasonable absence
regulations in any course. The student is responsible for learning and observing
these regulations.
WITHDRAWAL FROM
THE COLLEGE
A student who wishes to withdraw from the College
during the semester should contact the Assistant Dean for Freshmen or the
Assistant Dean for Sophomores. College personnel will explain the procedure to
ensure that the student’s financial and academic records are properly closed.
A student who decides to discontinue study at the
College as of the conclusion of the current semester must provide the Registrar
with written notification of such plans in order to receive a refund of the
contingency deposit. See page 14 for details.
GRADING SYSTEM
The evaluation of student
performance in courses is indicated by the use of traditional letter symbols.
These symbols and their definitions are as follows:
A
EXCELLENT - Signifies superior achievement through mastery of content or skills
and demonstration of creative and independent thinking.
B GOOD -
Signifies better-than-average achievement wherein the student reveals insight
and understanding.
C
SATISFACTORY - Signifies satisfactory achievement wherein the student’s work
has been of average quality and quantity. The student has demonstrated basic
competence in the subject area and may enroll in additional course work.
D PASSING
- Signifies unsatisfactory achievement wherein the student met only the minimum
requirements for passing the course and should not continue in the subject area
without departmental advice.
F FAILING
— Signifies that the student has not met the minimum requirements for passing
the course.
I INCOMPLETE
WORK — Assigned in accordance with the restrictions of established academic
policy.
R A
REPEATED COURSE — Students shall have the option of repeating courses for
which they already have received a passing grade in addition to those which they
have failed. Credit is received only once for the course. The most recent course
grade will count toward the GPA.
P PASSING
WORK, NO GRADE ASSIGNED — Converted from traditional grade of A through
D-.
X AUDIT — Work
as an auditor for which no credit is earned
W WITHDRAWAL — Signifies
withdrawal from the course from the sixth day through the ninth week of the
semester.
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Pluses and minuses may be awarded (except for A+,
F+, or F- ) at the discretion of the instructor. The cumulative grade point
average (GPA) is calculated by multiplying quality points by credits and
dividing the total quality points by the total credits. A quality point is the
unit of measurement of the quality of work done by the student. The cumulative
GPA is not determined by averaging semester GPA’s.
The grade point average for the major is
calculated in the same way as the cumulative grade point average. A minimum of
2.00 is required for the cumulative grade point average in the major to meet the
requirements for graduation.
|
Grade |
Quality
Points
Earned for Each
Semester Hour
|
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A
A-
B+
B
B-
C+
C
C-
D+
D
D-
F
|
4.00
3.67
3.33
3.00
2.67
2.33
2.00
1.67
1.33
1.00
0.67
0.00
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Pass/Fail
Use of the pass/fail grading option is limited as
follows (this does not apply to ENGL 105):
• Students may enroll on a P/F basis in no more
that one unit course per semester and in no more than four unit courses during
their undergraduate careers.
• P/F courses completed after declaration
of a major may not be used to satisfy a requirement of that major, including
courses required by the major department which are offered by other departments.
(Instructor-designated courses are excepted from
this limitation.)
• Courses for which a grade of P is recorded
may not be used toward fulfillment of any
distribution or "W" course requirement.
• Students may not enroll in ENGL 106 on a P/F
basis.
• A course selected on a P/F basis from which a
student subsequently withdraws will not count toward the four-course limit.
• Instructor-designated courses may be offered
during the May term with the approval of the Dean of the College. Such courses
are not counted toward the four- course limit.
• P grades are not computed in the grade point
average.
• Students electing the P/F option may
designate a minimum acceptance letter grade from A to B-. If the student earns
the designated grade or better, the grade will be recorded in the permanent
record and computed in the grade point average. If a student selects P/F (with
no designated minimum acceptance grade) and earns a grade of A to D-, a P will
be recorded in the permanent record but not computed in the grade point average.
In all cases, if a student earns a grade of F, this grade will be recorded in
the permanent record and computed in the student’s grade point average.
• Students must declare the P/F option before
the drop/add deadline.
• Instructors are not notified which of their
students are enrolled on an P/F basis.
• Students electing the P/F option are expected
to perform the same work as those enrolled on a regular basis.
Incomplete Grades
Incomplete grades may be given if, for
absolutely unavoidable reasons (usually medical in nature), the student has not
been able to complete the work required in the course. An incomplete grade must
be removed within six weeks of the next regular semester, otherwise the
incomplete is converted to an "F."
Repetition of Course
Students shall have the option of repeating
courses for which they already have received a passing grade in addition to
those which they have failed. Recording of grades for all repeated courses shall
be governed by the following conditions:
• A course may be repeated only one time. Both attempts will be recorded on the student’s
transcript.
• Credit for the course will be given only
once.
• The most recent grade will count toward the
GPA with this exception: A "W" grade cannot replace another grade.
Final Course Grade
Appeal Process
Assigning final course grades is a responsibility
that falls within the professional judgment and expertise of each faculty
member. Grades assess as accurately as possible a student’s performance
according to clear criteria provided in the course such as academic performance,
class attendance, and punctuality in submitting assignments. Student appeals of
the final course grade must follow the three-step procedure outlined below.
(1) Within two weeks of the beginning
of the semester following the conclusion of the course, the student should
request an informal conference with the instructor to discuss the grade and
attempt to resolve the concern.
(2) If the outcome of the informal
conference is not satisfactory to the student, or the instructor is not
available, the student may submit a written request to meet with the department
chairperson (or another faculty member in the department in instances involving
the chairperson) within two weeks of meeting with the instructor. The
student’s request must include a written statement outlining the basis for the
appeal. It is the function of the chairperson to determine the relevant facts
and to attempt to resolve the disagreement. The decision regarding the course
grade in question will be made by the instructor in consultation with the
chairperson (or his/ her stand-in). The student will receive from the department
chairperson written notification of the decision within one week of the meeting
with the
chairperson.
(3) If resolution has not been
achieved at step two, the student or the instructor may make a written appeal to
the Dean of the College within two weeks of the department chairperson’s
written notification. In order to resolve the disagreement, the Dean will confer
with the student and the instructor in private sessions, and may call additional
witnesses. If the Dean is unable to accomplish a resolution, s/he will forward
the case to the Committee on Academic Standards, which will make a final
decision on the matter. The Dean will communicate in writing to the student and
the instructor the final decision within three weeks of receiving the appeal.
This is the final step in the appeal process.
Academic Levels
The following table is used to determine the
academic grade level of degree candidates. See page 17 for related Financial Aid
information.
| Year |
Semester |
Number of
Semester Hours Earned |
| Freshman |
1 |
Fewer than 12 |
| |
2 |
At least 12 but
fewer than 24 |
| Sophomore |
1 |
At least 24 but
fewer than 40 |
| |
2 |
At least 40 but
fewer than 56 |
| Junior |
1 |
At least 56 but
fewer than 76 |
| |
2 |
At least 76 but
fewer than 96 |
| Senior |
1 |
At least 96 but
fewer than 112 |
| |
2 |
More than 112 |
Academic Standing
Good Academic Standing
Students will be considered in good academic
standing if they meet the following standard:
|
Semester Hours Completed |
Minimum Cumulative GPA |
| fewer than or equal to
16 |
1.70 |
| more than 16, fewer than or equal to
32 |
1.80 |
| more than 32, fewer than or equal to
48 |
1.90 |
| more than
48 |
2.00 |
Probation
Students who do not meet the standards for good
academic standing at the end of one semester will be placed on academic
probation. Students on academic probation are required to pass ARC 100, Success
Skills Workshop, if they have not already done so and are encouraged to attend
programs developed by the Freshman and Sophomore deans.
Suspension
Students will be subject to suspension from the
College when:
• their cumulative grade point average is below
good standing for any two semesters, or
• they earn a grade point average of 1.00 or
under in any one semester.
The period of suspension will be for a minimum
of one full semester, not including May term or the summer sessions.
• After this time students may apply for
readmission to the College. The decision for readmission will be made by the
Committee on Academic Standards. Readmission is not guaranteed.
• Students readmitted after suspension will be
on academic probation.
• Students readmitted after suspension who fail
to meet the required standards may be
dismissed.
• Students may request permission to take
courses at another institution. Courses not receiving prior approval will not be
accepted for transfer.
Dismissal
Students will be subject to dismissal from the
College when:
• they exceed 24 semester hours of unsuccessful
course attempts (grades of F and W) except in the case of withdrawal for
documented medical or psychological reasons,
or
• they cannot reasonably complete all
requirements for a degree.
The standard length of dismissal will be for a
period of two years.
• After this time students may apply for
readmission to the College. The decision for readmission will be made by the
Committee on Academic Standards. Readmission is not guaranteed.
• Students readmitted after dismissal will be
on academic probation.
• Students may request permission to take
courses at another institution. Courses not receiving prior approval will not be
accepted for
transfer.
Probation, suspension, and dismissal become
effective at the end of the semester in which the student fails to meet the
academic standards listed above. The student will be notified of such action via
U.S. mail. Receipt of such notice is not a prerequisite to the student’s being
placed on probation, suspension, or dismissal.
Academic Honesty
The integrity of the academic process of the
College requires honesty in all phases of the instructional program. The
College assumes that students are committed to the principle of academic
honesty. Students who fail to honor this commitment are subject to dismissal.
Procedural guidelines and rules for the adjudication of cases of academic
dishonesty are printed in The Faculty Handbook and The Pathfinder (the
student academic handbook), copies of which are available in the library.
Academic Honors Dean's List
Students are admitted to the Dean’s List at the
end of the fall and spring semesters if they eet all of the following
conditions:
• complete at least 12 semester hours for the
semester
• earn a minimum grade point average of 3.50
for the semester
• do not incur grades of F
• do not incur grades of P (except in those
courses graded only as P/F)
• do not repeat any courses (except those which
may be repeated for credit)
Graduation Honors
Students are awarded the Bachelor of Arts degree,
the Bachelor of Science degree, or the Bachelor of Science in Nursing degree
with honors when they have earned the following grade point averages based on
all courses attempted at Lycoming, with a minimum of 64 semester hours (16
units) required for a student to be eligible for honors:
summa cum laude...............
exactly 3.90-4.00
magna cum laude...............
exactly 3.67-3.89
cum laude
............................exactly 3.33-3.66
Academic Honor Awards, Prizes,
and Societies - Superior
academic achievement is recognized through the conferring of awards and prizes
at the annual Honors Convocation and Commencement and through election to
membership in honor societies.
SOCIETIES
| Biology........................................ |
Beta Beta Beta |
| Business..................................... |
Delta Mu Delta |
| Chemistry.................................... |
Gamma Sigma Epsilon |
| Communication ........................... |
Alpha Epsilon Rho
|
| Criminal Justice
.......................... |
Alpha Phi Sigma |
|
Economics.................................. |
Omicron Delta
Epsilon |
| Education.................................... |
Kappa Delta Pi |
|
English........................................ |
Sigma Tau Delta |
|
Foreign
Language......................... |
Phi Sigma Iota |
|
General
Academic........................ |
Phi Kappa Phi |
|
History
....................................... |
Phi Alpha Theta |
|
Philosophy
.................................. |
Phi Sigma Tau |
|
Physics....................................... |
Sigma Pi Sigma |
|
Political
Science.......................... |
Pi Sigma Alpha |
|
Psychology.................................. |
Psi Chi |
|
Social Science............................. |
Pi Gamma Mu |
|
Theatre........................................ |
Alpha
Psi Omega |
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