Ohio Admin. Code 3341-3-66 - Accelerated bachelor's to master's program-graduate
The graduate college at Bowling Green state university has
several graduate programs that permit qualified undergraduate students who are
earning their bachelor's degree at BGSU to apply to an accelerated bachelor's
to master's program.1
Participating in an accelerated bachelor's to
master's program provides the opportunity for students to complete both a
bachelor's degree and a master's degree in an efficient and effective
format.
Participating in an accelerated
bachelor's to master's program provides students with the opportunity to
complete both a bachelor's degree and a master's degree in an efficient
manner. Not all master's degree programs participate in the accelerated
bachelor's to master's program.
1
These policies pertain to students who wish to officially work toward both a
bachelor's degree and master's degree at BGSU simultaneously.
However, students
Students who wish to take graduate level courses
during their senior year but not officially enroll in a master's degree program
may apply to do so by earning advanced undergraduate status (AUS). AUS
guidelines can be found on the graduate college website documents and
forms.
Students interested in pursuing an accelerated bachelor's to master's program should see program specific websites for additional guidelines and expectations. In addition to any program-specific requirements, the following graduate college policies apply to all programs.
An application to an accelerated
bachelor's to master's program requires the following
An application to an accelerated bachelor's to master's
program requires the applicant to demonstrate their preparation with the
following:
2 For the purposes of this policy, BGSU GPA is calculated based on BGSU credits only. However, credits transferred into BGSU may be counted as part of credit hours earned (not GPA).
Once accepted into an accelerated bachelor's to master's
program, the student remains coded as an undergraduate student with
pre-master's
accelerated status and officially becomes coded as a
graduate student once the student has earned the bachelor's degree. The
student's coding as an undergraduate or graduate student is associated with
other BGSU policies pertaining to degree status.
The following policies apply to students in all accelerated bachelor's to master's programs. Applicants should check individual program websites for any additional policies pertaining to that particular program.
³The state of Ohio normally requires undergraduate bachelor's degrees to have at least one hundred twenty semester hours and master's degrees to have at least thirty hours beyond the bachelor-level. As a result, normally, a student not in an accelerated program is required to have a minimum of one hundred fifty hours for both the bachelor's and master's degrees.
Undergraduate studentsStudents enrolled in accelerated bachelor's to
master's programs with pre-master's status
will pay tuition at the undergraduate rate for all
coursework through the completion of the bachelor's degree. Thereafter,
students will be coded as graduate students and pay the graduate rate for
tuition and fees.
Students will be eligible for financial aid based on their BGSU
student status as either an undergraduate or graduate student.
During a student's pre-master's status, they remain
coded as undergraduate students and may be eligible for financial aid but not
graduate assistantships.
When accelerated
students are still in undergraduate status, they remain coded as undergraduate
students and may be eligible for financial aid but not graduate
assistantships. Once students become regularly admitted graduate students
with full graduate student status, they may be eligible for graduate-level
financial assistance, including graduate assistantships with stipends and/or
graduate tuition scholarships.
A student admitted to an accelerated
bachelor's to master's program with a pre-master's status may withdraw from the
program and continue as a traditional undergraduate student toward the
completion of the bachelor's degree.
An
undergraduate student admitted to an accelerated bachelor's to master's program
may withdraw from the accelerated program and continue as a traditional
undergraduate student toward the completion of the bachelor's
degree.
Students who fail to maintain minimum requirements for adequate
academic graduate standing will lose pre-master's
accelerated status, and as a result will be unable to
continue taking graduate level courses. Under these conditions, if adequate
standing is maintained for their undergraduate program, the student may
continue in the bachelor's degree program.
Notes
Promulgated Under: 111.15
Statutory Authority: 3345
Rule Amplifies: 3345
Prior Effective Dates: 11/02/2016
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