Guidelines for Selective Admission Programs & Restricted
Courses
Guidelines for Selective/Restricted Programs:
-
Selective Program Review/Approval Process:
Undergraduate academic programs of study that are selective
in nature have both pre- and professional (degree)-level
academic plans set up in Campus Connection. All other programs
have only degree plans (ie: B.S., B.A., B.F.A, etc.). This
set-up enables better tracking and counting of students at
different plan levels within their intended program of
study.
Plans for current programs to become selective as well as
new selective admission program proposals are to be
reviewed/approved by the College Curriculum Committees and
Academic Affairs Committee.
-
A. New Selective Program Requests:
Proposals for new programs with restrictions should be
presented on a Stage II Program Proposal form. After being
approved by Academic Affairs and Graduate Council (if
applicable), new programs are presented to University
Senate, and to the State Board of Higher Education for
final review/approval. (See the NDUS Academic Affairs
Formal Request form available online.)
-
B. Requests to Restrict Existing
Programs:
Proposals for requests to make existing programs
restricted should be submitted in a memo, with supporting
documentation. Program restrictions to existing programs
will be presented in the Academic Affairs report to
University Senate for informational only.
Requests for restrictions on both new and existing programs
should include the following:
- rationale for change/restriction
- pre-professional and professional plan requirements
- effective date/term for effective change
- process for transitioning or grand-fathering currently
enrolled students
- application process, including selection criteria
- program enrollment limits
- changes in course restrictions as a result
- plan for notifying the Office of Admission and Business
Office (if program fees apply), as well as to any impacted
academic departments (i.e.: those whose students minor,
double major or take courses as part of their program
requirements).
-
Process to Change Student Plans (from pre- to
professional):
- New and currently enrolled students who declare programs
that have professional-level (selective admission) components
are placed into the “pre-xxx� plan of the program by
either Registration and Records (major changes/reactivations)
or the Offices of Admission or International Programs (new
undergraduate admits).
- After program selective admission decisions are made,
departments notify Registration and Records of students to
move from the pre- into the professional plan of a program.
Student lists must include: name, ID number, professional
plan, effective term, and advisor name (if change is
applicable).
- Ideally, professional admission decisions will be made
prior to the start of registration for a future term. This is
especially true if restrictions are to be placed on
professional level courses.
- Students who do not advance into a professional plan of a
program, or who are demoted from professional status, will
remain in the pre-professional plan unless/until they 1)
reapply and achieve professional status, or 2) declare a new
program of study. It is expected that advising play a key
role in these students' decision making and academic
planning.
- Advisor changes for new plans will take effect for the
term associated with professional plan status as indicated by
the academic department.
-
Process for Assessing Program Fees tied to Professional
Level Programs:
- Program fees must be approved by the Provost and Vice
President for Student Affairs as well as the State Board of
Higher Education. According to SBHE policy, program fees that
are restricted to students enrolled in a particular program
may be assessed to support programs that have exceptional and
critical needs that are not adequately funded through other
sources. Program fee revenue must be allocated for the
primary benefit of students enrolled in that program.
- Students are assessed professional program fees (if
applicable) beginning in the effective term of professional
plan status as indicated to Registration and Records by the
department. NOTE: Most programs do not assess fees during the
summer.
- If a late admission decision is made and a program fee is
to take effect for a current term, the change must be made
within the first three weeks of the regular semester (by
third week census date). Otherwise, the professional status
will take effect (on the record) the next academic
term.
- Program fees assessed in a given term will be refunded to
students only if they request a major change to a new program
prior to the third week census date. After this date, fees
collected will be retained by the original academic
department. They may neither be refunded to students nor
transferred to students' new academic departments. Requests
for special circumstances and appeals should be directed to
the Business Office.
Guidelines for Course Restrictions:
Courses with approved restrictions (i.e., program,
classification, etc.) as indicated in catalog descriptions are set
up in Campus Connection, upon departmental request, to limit
registration to students admitted to the professional plan-levels
of programs. Note: restrictions do not include class prerequisites
and corequisites, which are handled on the Course Proposal and
Change Form.
-
A. New Restricted Course Requests:
Requests for new courses with restrictions must be submitted
on a Course Proposal & Change Form to the appropriate
College Curriculum Committee and the Academic Affairs
Committees. Courses approved at these levels will be placed on
a University Senate agenda for approval.
-
B. Requests to Restrict Existing Courses:
Requests for making existing courses selective may be
submitted either on a Course Proposal & Change Form, or in
a Memo with the detailed request and rationale, to the
appropriate College Curriculum and the Academic Affairs
Committee. Restriction requests on existing courses will be
placed on a University Senate agenda for information only.
For either of the above requests, if course restrictions are
not part of a professional level of a program, a rationale
should be provided as to the need for the restriction.
Once approved at the appropriate levels, courses will be set
up in Campus Connection and catalog descriptions with the
necessary restrictions by the Office of Registration and
Records. If the department does not want these restrictions
enforced (but rather published as recommendations), they must
clearly indicate this on the Course Proposal and Change form.
Students not in a professional-level plan of a program may only
register for restricted courses with department or instructor
permission.
(4/2007)