Academic
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Academic
Policies
Definition
of Academic Terms
The following
terms are provided for clarification.
Undergraduate
Student one who has not attained a baccalaureate degree,
but is taking courses for credit.
Tuition
the money charged students for academic courses.
Semester
Hour the basic unit of measurement in determining the
time spent in class. For example, a course giving one semester hour
of credit usually meets for one hour of instruction each week during
the semester.
Credit
the unit of academic value placed on every university course.
A student is given a credit for each semester hour of academic work
satisfactorily completed.
Quality Points
units for measurement to determine the quality of work a
student does. See page 59 for quality point equivalency for letter
grades.
Grade Point
Average The average quality point earned per semester
hour. It is computed by dividing the total number of quality points
earned by the number of hours attempted 4.0 is a perfect GPA.
Advisors
Each student
is personally responsible for completing all requirements established
for his or her degree by the university and department. It is the
student's responsibility to inform herself/himself of these requirements.
A student's advisor may not assume these responsibilities. Any substitution,
waiver, or exemption from any established requirement or academic
standard may be accomplished only with appropriate approval.
Advisors help
students with their schedules, but the primary obligation for knowing
and meeting all graduation requirements rests with the student.
Class
Load
The normal class
load for a university student during the fall or spring semester
is 16 hours of course work per week. The minimum load for full-time
status is 12 hours of course work per week, and the maximum load
is 19 hours of course work per week. To register for more than 19
hours, the student must gain permission from the Appeals Committee
before he/she registers. The student must present to the committee:
1) a properly signed "Petition to Take an Overload" form;
2) a letter of endorsement from his/her major advisor; 3) a written
statement specifying the amount of extracurricular activity including
work to which he/she will be committed during the overload semester.
Any student who enrolls for more than 19 hours without proper authorization
will be required to reduce the load to 19 hours or less. Students
on probation may register for no more than 13 hours. Further, such
students are required, when at all possible, to repeat courses in
which they received a grade of D or F.
During each
summer term, the minimum load for full-time status is 6 hours for
undergraduates and the maximum is 7 hours. To register for more
than 7 hours, the same procedure must be followed as for an overload
in a regular semester.
Class
Attendance
Belmont University
is committed to the idea that regular class attendance is essential
to successful scholastic achievement. Absence is permitted only
in cases of illness or other legitimate cause. Attendance is checked
from the first class meeting, so late registrants will have some
absences accrued when they first meet a class.
In cases of
legitimate absence from the class, the student has the opportunity
and responsibility to make up all class work missed. If a class
absence is necessary because of an activity by another class or
university organization, the sponsor of the activity will give the
Provost a list of participants in advance, and the students involved
will obtain from the Provost an excuse to present to the instructor.
In case of absence for any other reason, the student will present
his reason directly to the instructor. Students on the Dean's List
of Honor Students, based upon the record of the previous semester
at Belmont, may be granted unlimited absences by the instructor
for which only the excused ones carry make-up privileges.
When the number
of absences for any reason exceeds four times the number of scheduled
class meetings per week (25% of class meetings during Summer term),
the student is involuntarily dropped from the course with a grade
of "WF." Appeal is to the Provost.
Be advised that
certain departments and individual professors enforce policies which
differ from the above policy. See the departmental section of this
catalog for the attendance policy for each department and the syllabus
for each course for that course's specific attendance requirements
which may be different from those stated here.
Changing
a Schedule
A $5 fee is
charged for each change in schedule during the drop/add and late
registration period at the beginning of each semester.
Courses dropped
after the date specified in the calendar are not subject to refunds.
Courses may not be dropped in the 30 calendar days immediately prior
to the end of the semester.
Change
of Name or Address
Any current
student needing to change pertinent personal data during a semester
should fill out "Personal Data Change Request" at Belmont
Central or fill out a request on the web and email to the appropriate
university office. Changes of address must be made prior to exam
week each semester. In order for a name change to be processed,
the student must bring an official document for a copy to be made
in Belmont Central. An official document includes: a marriage certificate,
a court order, a driver's license with a picture ID, or a social
security card.
Course
Policies
Belmont University
reserves the right not to offer any course in which fewer than 10
students enroll.
Any department
may offer special studies courses under the number 199-499 for 0-3
hours credit. In these courses an opportunity is provided for the
student to pursue an area of special interest under the supervision
of a faculty member. Approval of the appropriate department chairperson,
the dean, and the Provost is required before enrolling in these
courses.
This bulletin
is a listing of courses. The mere listing of a course does not guarantee
its offering any particular semester or year. Certain courses may
be offered only when demand warrants their offering.
Course
Numbers
At Belmont,
the first digit in the course number indicates the year level of
the course, as follows:
Courses which
begin with number 1 are primarily for freshmen; those beginning
with 2, primarily for sophomores; 3, primarily for juniors and seniors;
4, primarily for seniors. Certain courses are numbered below 100
and are offered as remedial courses.
Courses which
end in an odd number are more likely to be offered in the fall and/or
in odd years. Courses which end in an even number are more likely
to be offered in the spring and/or in even-numbered years. For the
purpose of determining course offerings, both the Fall and Spring
semesters of the 2000-2001 school year are considered even years.
Withdrawal
from the University
Students wishing
to completely withdraw must obtain a withdrawal form from Belmont
Central. Upon completion of the form, it is returned to Belmont
Central for processing.
No financial
credit will be given after the fifth week of classes. Withdrawals
must be handled in person. A telephone call giving intent to withdraw
does not constitute an official withdrawal. Students may not withdraw
during the last 30 days of a semester.
Convocation
In addition
to the academic requirements, all degree-seeking students at Belmont
must complete requirements for Convocation in order to graduate.
These requirements
include a variety of cultural, social, academic, and spiritual experiences
which will enable the Belmont graduate to develop a well-rounded
perspective on life. Through these common Belmont experiences, students
are reminded that education is not confined to the classroom, but
that learning can and should be a lifestyle.
Convocation
programs are scheduled at various times throughout the semester
to accommodate students' schedules. Be aware that students are not
exempt from the Convocation requirement for reasons of employment
or class schedule.
Specific requirements
are posted in The Guide, Belmont's student handbook.
Convocation
events are publicized through the VISION, BTV (Belmont Television),
Convocation Line (460-5005), and the Student Affairs web page (www.belmont.edu/studentaffairs/convocation).
If you have
questions about Convocation requirements or about the Convocation
program in general, contact the Office of Student Affairs at 460-6407.
Honor System
The members
of the Belmont University community seek to provide students with
a high-quality education while encouraging in the entire community
a sense of ethics, social responsibility, and interdependence. We
believe that trust is a vital part of this enterprise and that self-discipline
and responsibility to one another are also essential elements. We
also believe that any instance of dishonesty is a violation of the
entire Belmont University community. Therefore, the Belmont University
Honor System aims to cultivate a community based on trust, academic
honesty, and social responsibility that promotes the following:
- to ensure
that students, faculty, staff, and administrators understand that
the responsibility for upholding honor at Belmont University lies
with them;
- to ensure
that all members of the Belmont University community understand
that all forms of dishonesty represent a profound violation of
the entire community;
- to clarify
what constitutes academic dishonesty and to define standards of
behavior expected of all members of our community;
- to promote
an environment at Belmont University where honor is expected and
respected and where dishonesty is not tolerated;
- to define
a statement of expectations at Belmont University regarding behavior,
as well as a mechanism for a consistent and reasonable adjudication
process for violations of our community.
Affirmation
of Academic Integrity
The Belmont
community values personal integrity and academic honesty as the
foundation of university life and the cornerstone of a premiere
educational experience. Our community believes trust among its members
is essential for both scholarship and effective interactions and
operations of the university. As members of the Belmont community,
students, faculty, staff, and administrators are all responsible
for ensuring that their experiences will be free of behaviors which
compromise this value. In order to uphold academic integrity, the
university has adopted an Honor System. Students and faculty will
work together to establish the optimal conditions for honorable
academic work.
Student
Honor Pledge
I will not
give or receive aid during examinations; I will not give or receive
false or impermissible aid in course work, in the preparation of
reports, or in any other type of work that is to be used by the
instructor as the basis of my grade; I will not engage in any form
of academic fraud. Furthermore, I will uphold my responsibility
to see to it that others abide by the spirit and letter of this
Honor Pledge.
Standards
for Academic Integrity
Generally,
academic fraud and dishonesty includes, but is not limited to, the
following categories: cheating, fabrication, plagiarism, multiple
submissions, obtaining unfair advantage, aiding and abetting, and
unauthorized access to academic or administrative systems.
Cheating:
using unauthorized notes, aids, or information on an examination;
altering a graded work prior to its return to a faculty member;
allowing another person to do one's work and submitting it for grading.
Plagiarism:
submitting material that in part or whole is not one's own work
without properly attributing the correct sources of its content.
Fabrication:
inventing or falsifying information, data, or citation; presenting
data gathered outside of acceptable professorial guidelines; failing
to provide an accurate account of how information, data or citations
were gathered; altering documents affecting academic records; forging
signatures or authorizing false information on an official academic
document, grade, letter, form, ID card, or any other university
document.
Multiple
Submissions: submitting identical papers or course work for
credit in more than one course without prior permission of the instructor.
Obtaining
Unfair Advantage: a) gaining or providing access to examination
materials prior to the time authorized by an instructor; b) stealing,
defacing, or destroying library or research materials which can
deprive others of their use; c) unauthorized collaboration on an
academic assignment; d) retaining, possessing, or circulating previously
used examination materials without the instructor's permission;
e) obstructing or interfering with another student's academic work;
or f) engaging in any activity designed to obtain an unfair advantage
over another student in the same course.
Unauthorized
Access: viewing or altering in any way computer records, modifying
computer programs or systems, releasing or distributing information
gathered via unauthorized access, or in any way interfering with
the use or availability of computer systems/information.
Aiding and
Abetting: providing material, information, or other assistance
which violates the above Standards for Academic Integrity; providing
false information in connection with any inquiry regarding academic
integrity.
For a full printed
version of the Honor System, consult The Guide. For additional
information regarding procedures for upholding the Honor System,
including sanctions for violation of the System, contact the Office
of Student Affairs.
Assessment
Program
At Belmont,
we are beginning to implement a comprehensive and coordinated Assessment
Program. The purpose of the program is two-fold. The first purpose
of the program is to identify areas in the university which need
improvement. Several surveys during a student's years of enrollment
here will focus on ideas, opinions, and values as they impact the
institution. In this way, through the Assessment Program students
will help us to identify both what works and what does not, so that
together we can continually improve the quality of the institution.
Assessment results instruct us on how we are meeting our educational
and institutional mission to be a premier teaching university, and
we use assessment to ensure that the educational experience is the
finest that we can provide.
The second purpose
of the Assessment Program is to provide students and faculty advisors
with valuable information on student strengths and development while
they are here at Belmont. As an active learner, these results help
students to share the responsibility for continued growth as well
as monitor a student's progress. We want to determine not only how
much and how well students learn, but also how and where students
learn. Consequently, Belmont University invites each student to
be a part of its growing tradition in the assessment of student
learning and growth.
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