Nursing Program
Progression, Retention, Dismissal, and Readmission Policies
- Students must have documentation of malpractice insurance of $1,000,000/$3,000,000.
- Students must have documentation of current health and accident insurance.
- Students must have documentation of current certification in CPR.
- Students must maintain current licensure as a Registered Nurse.
- Students must provide evidence of current health status, TB testing, hepatitis-B vaccine, Varicella titer, MMR and tetanus.
- Students must have a minimum grade of C in all nursing courses.
- Students must have a cumulative institutional GPA of 3.0 for all graduate courses.
- Earning grades below “B” in graduate courses will result in the following consequences: Students admitted Fall 2011and thereafter will be dismissed from the Graduate School if they accumulate three or more academic deficiency points unless otherwise indicated by individual program policy. A grade of “C” (although it may be credited toward a degree) equals one deficiency point. A grade of “D,” “WF” or “F,” or “U” (none of which will be credited toward a degree) equals two deficiency points. Candidates admitted PRIOR to Fall 2011 and receiving two grades below “C” (“D”, “F”, “WF”,“U”) will be dismissed from the program. One grade below a "C" results in a warning.
- If dismissed from the program, the student must wait a minimum of two semesters and obtain approval from the academic department, before applying for readmission. The academic program reserves the right to place specific conditions and contingencies on any offer of readmission. Readmission is not guaranteed and prior academic performance and conduct in the program will be considered.
- The maximum time allowed for completion of the master’s degree is seven calendar years. No work completed more than seven years prior to degree completion will be accepted toward the degree, except with special permission from the student’s major professor, the Dean of the College of Nursing and approval from the Dean of the Graduate School.
- No more than 6 semester hours of academic work may be transferred from another institution into a master’s-level graduate program. This credit must be documented in the form of an official transcript at the time of admission. Transfer credit will be evaluated after admission, by the academic department. To be eligible, credit must be no more than seven years old prior to completion of the degree.