The Office of Registration and Records administers the NDSU
policies governing the acceptance of credit from outside
institutions. These requirements apply to returning students who
have attended other institutions, as well as new transfer students.
Before credits may be evaluated for specific NDSU course
equivalency or application to departmental programs, transfer
courses must be accepted for university credit according to the
following guidelines:
- College-level coursework from regionally accredited colleges
or universities (or equivalent for international institutions) is
eligible for acceptance in transfer.
- Courses accepted in transfer will not replace any grades or
credits earned at NDSU. If a course is completed at NDSU and an
attempt is made to repeat that course elsewhere, the credit is
considered duplication and is not eligible for transfer.
- Credit for a remedial course is not accepted for transfer if
the course is remedial by definition of the transferring
institution or if it is equivalent to a remedial course at NDSU.
It may, however, fulfill prerequisite requirements.
- Technical or vocational coursework from regionally accredited
institutions may be accepted as free elective credit only.
- Credit will be evaluated not only as it appears on the
transcript, but also on the basis by which the credit was
initially awarded by the sending institution. Credit by
examination or life experience is not accepted for transfer.
- The Office of Registration and Records determines the
applicability of transfer credit toward NDSU general education
requirements according to institutional and North Dakota
University System guidelines, where applicable.
- College-level credits that do not have course equivalents at
NDSU will be accepted as free electives and may count only toward
total credits. The academic department may determine whether
these transfer electives may satisfy specific curricular
requirements through a course substitution process. (See also
General Education Administrative Policies.)
- NDSU requires that a minimum of 37 credits toward a
baccalaureate degree be earned at the junior or senior (300- and
400-level) level. Therefore, while a freshman- or sophomore-level
(100- or 200-level) course transferred from another institution
may satisfy a specific upper-level program requirement at NDSU,
that course will not be counted toward the 37- credit
upper-division degree requirement.
- Transferable courses with D grades or above will be accepted
by the university; however, colleges and departments may have
higher standards to determine course applicability toward their
respective majors and programs.
- The name of transfer institutions and total credits accepted
by NDSU will be indicated on the official NDSU transcript.
Individual transfer courses are not detailed on the academic
record, but will be provided in a Transfer Equivalency Worksheet
after admission to the university.
- Total transfer credits are converted to semester credits, if
applicable.
- Transfer grades are not recorded nor computed in the
institutional cumulative GPA. They are used only for purposes of
admission to the University and to certain programs, as well as
for determining eligibility to graduate with honor.
Common Course Numbers
Institutions in the North Dakota University System have
established common course numbers (CCN) for many courses to
facilitate transfer within the system. Under the CCN agreement,
transfer students who have successfully completed CCN courses will
not be required to retake them at NDSU unless their degree program
requires a higher grade. However, CCN courses will not fulfill
residence requirements nor will 100- and 200-level courses fulfill
upper-division requirements for graduation.
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