Overview
| Curriculum | Admission Policies & Procedures
| Courses
Admission
Policies and Procedures
A.
Requirements for Admission to the Graduate Program
- To be considered for acceptance as a graduate student, the applicant's
file in the graduate
- education office must include the following items:
- A letter of intent indicating why you want to pursue the graduate program
in which you plan to apply.
- A score of 45 on the Miller's Analogy Test taken within the last five
years. Under special circumstances, the Graduate Record Examination (GRE)
may be substituted for the MAT. For applicants using the GRE, they must
present scores which represent a combined score of 1000 from the verbal
and quantitative sections and a 4.0 or greater from any analytical writing
section of the GRE will be given full acceptance and priority for admission.
- Transcript(s) which indicate at least a 2.75 cumulative undergraduate
grade-point average on a 4.0 scale or 3.0 average in the last 60 hours of
university credit for full acceptance. A student may receive conditional
acceptance with a 2.5 cumulative grade-point average on a 4.0 scale or a
2.75 in the last 60 hours of transferable university credit.
- A satisfactory writing sample.
- Praxis I tests (MAT only).
If
an unclassified student decides to pursue a graduate degree, admission requirements
in effect at the time of application must be met. Upon admission to the graduate
education program, a maximum of six semester hours of graduate credit earned
during non-degree status may be applied toward graduation. The date of the
earliest course approved for credit will be used as the beginning of the six-year
time limit for completion of the degree.
Up to six hours of gradute
transfer credit from a regionally accredited institution may be applied toward
graduate degree requirements in education. Determination of transfer credit
will be made at the time of admission by the School of Education.
B.
Departmental Screening
After a student submits
an application form, undergraduate transcripts and meets all requirements
for admission as defined in the graduate education guidelines, the applicant's
file is forwarded to the Teacher Education Council for screening. This committee
can make one of the following recommendations:
- Full admission when
the applicant has an undergraduate major (30 semester hours) and a GPA described
above. These students will not generally be required to take undergraduate
courses unless the student is seeking licensure. Certain undergraduate courses
may be required in this case. Departments may require appropriate tests.
- Probationary admission
will be the category for most applicants with the following deficiencies:
(a) GPA below minimum standards listed above, (b) failure to meet academic
requirements in the student's academic department, or (c) an MAT score of
40-44. Students who earn at least a B in 6 hours of coursework as directed
by the committee become eligible for full admission.
C.
Admission to Courses
for Non-Degree Seeking Students
Students
with an undergraduate major, minor, or 18 undergraduate hours in the content
area are eligible to take graduate courses as non-degree seeking students.
These courses may not be used as hours toward the undergraduate degree.
D. MAT
and Licensure
The processes to complete
the MAT and Licensure are same as those outlined for completion of licensure
in the Undergraduate Bulletin.
Candidates for teacher
licensure who replace Student Teaching with full-time teaching are required
to enroll in a one hour Practicum course for Belmont faculty supervision.
Candidates who have completed the 18 credit hour professional education minor
at Belmont University in the undergraduate program, with grades of ‘C’
or above in each course, and a GPA in the minor of 3.0 or above, may be considered
as meeting these competencies. With the approval of the Chair of the Department
of Education, these specific candidates may have up to twelve (12) hours of
the 42 hours required for the Master of Arts in Teaching (M.A.T.) waived.
Belmont University does not accept transfer courses as having met the professional
competencies. To be eligible for this waiver in the M.A.T. program, candidates
must take at least 60 credit hours at Belmont and complete the undergraduate
degree at Belmont University.
E. Admission
to Candidacy in the M. Ed.
1. Students apply for admission to candidacy after completing EDU 6010,
6020, 6030, 6040, 6050. At this point in the program, a Mentor Committee
is formed.
2. Students granted probationary admission may apply for admission to candidacy
when they have completed prerequisites and have a 3.0 or better GPA
F.
Mentor Committee in the M.Ed.
Each student, in conjunction
with a faculty mentor and a professional mentor will develop a personalized
curriculum through a combination of coursework, on-the-job projects, independent
study, seminars, workshops, or other educational work to meet the professional
goals of the student. The mentor committee is formed during the first 18 hours
of course work as part of the Developing and Sustaining Learning Communities
Block. Mentor communities are formed in consultation with the Associate Dean.
G.
Thesis/Project Proposal in the M.Ed.
Each
student submits a proposal and preliminary bibliography for a thesis or project
to the chair of the Mentor Committee. The committee approves or disapproves
the proposal and, on acceptance, oversees the student's completion of the
thesis or project.
Most
of the three hours allotted to Thesis in Education will be thesis or project
preparation. The student submits a final copy of the thesis or project, prepared
according to the style manual agreed upon with the Mentor Committee. The committee
will be available to the student for consultation during the preparation of
the thesis or project and apprises the student of any deadlines for submission.
The Mentor Committee approves the thesis or project. The thesis or project
must be submitted for binding one month before graduation.
H.
Thesis/Project Proposal in the M.Ed.
In
order for the M.Ed. candidate to meet all deadlines and fulfill all requirements
for admission, candidacy, and graduation, the following tentative time table
has been compiled:
- At least four weeks prior to the anticipated date of registration for
classes, the applicant must submit to the admissions officer of Graduate
Studies in Education
- an application
for admission to the graduate program;
- an official
transcript of all graduate work completed at other institutions;
- a letter of
interest indicating why you want to pursue the graduate program;
- a resume
- a copy of the
results of the MAT; and
- an application
fee of $50.00.
- After admission
to the graduate program:
- A faculty mentor
and a professional mentor in the student's area of interest. A mentor
from the student's major area is assigned by the Associate Dean.
- The student
should consult with this mentor as far in advance of registration
as possible in order to determine what courses to schedule for each
semester
- Within three hours
of graduation:
- Students take
EDU 6900 Thesis project in which the focus is on preparation of the
thesis or project.
- Students must
register for EDU 6901, Continuation of Study each semester until the
completion of EDU 6900.
- The application
for graduation must be completed during registration of the semester
in which the student will be graduating.
- The Teacher
Education Council reviews the reports from the Mentor Committee and
makes a recommendation to the Provost relative to conferring the degree.
|