Grading System
A student completing a course at UCM will receive a final grade in the course of an A, B, C, D, or F. Graduate courses may not be taken for Pass/Fail credit. Only grades A through F impact grade point average. The grading system used in evaluating a student’s work is as follows:
A |
- |
Work of marked excellence |
B |
- |
Work of superior quality |
C |
- |
Work of average quality |
D |
- |
Work of minimal passing quality |
F |
- |
Failure to do work of passing quality |
CR* |
- |
Credit for Official Certifications, Licenses, Diplomas, Military Credit, Validated Credit, Prior Learning, Work Experience, and Transfer Credit |
LD** |
- |
Designates a Late Drop of a course (but not the entire semester schedule), granted for extenuating circumstances after the published last day to withdraw |
LW** |
- |
Designates a Late Withdrawal of a complete semester’s schedule, granted for extenuating circumstances after the published last day to withdraw |
NC |
- |
No credit granted for course (audit) |
NR |
- |
No grade reported by instructor |
SC* |
- |
Credit by examination |
U |
- |
Course not completed for justifiable reasons, students may not graduate with a U on their record |
W** |
- |
Course dropped during withdrawal period |
WA** |
- |
Course dropped administratively |
* CR and SC credits do not count towards 5000/6000-level requirements, with the exception of graduate transfer hours approved by a program coordinator.
** For more information about withdrawal grades, refer to the section Changes in Schedules, and either the Calendar in this catalog or the UCM Student Handbook. Course withdrawal and refund dates can also be found in MyCentral in the Student Services tab in the UCM Registration section under the link Check Refund and Withdrawal Dates.
Computation of Grade Point Average (GPA)
Graduate cumulative grade point average includes only graduate credit completed at UCM. If transfer work is accepted into the graduate degree/certificate program, the transfer work is posted as credit only; grades do not transfer to UCM. Transfer work may not be used to change academic standing. All UCM grades, including all grades of courses that have been repeated (up to six hours of repeated grades may be petitioned for exclusion from the GPA calculation) are included in the computation.
In order to compute grade point average, total quality points earned are divided by total hours attempted. Each semester hour is assigned a grade point value as indicated below:
- Each semester hour of A is assigned 4 quality points.
- Each semester hour of B is assigned 3 quality points.
- Each semester hour of C is assigned 2 quality points.
- Each semester hour of D is assigned 1 quality point.
- Each semester hour of F is assigned 0 quality points.
- Each semester hour of CR, LD, LW, SC, W, or WA is not considered.
- Each semester hour of U and NR is not considered until a grade is assigned.
Minimum Grades and Grade Point Averages Required
No grade below a C may apply to the degree/certificate program. In addition, no more than six semester hours of credit with a grade of C will be applied toward degree/certificate requirements. In order to receive a degree or certificate, a student must earn a minimum grade point average of 3.00 in each of the following areas:
- All work attempted at UCM
- All work taken to satisfy degree/certificate requirements at UCM
UCM does not freeze grade point average upon graduation. Additional courses taken at the graduate level at UCM will continue to impact both the UCM and cumulative GPAs.
Academic Standing
Students can find their academic standing in MyCentral in the Student Services tab under “Check Your Registration Status” or on the “Unofficial Transcript”.
Good Academic Standing
UCM graduate students who have both a 3.00 cumulative and UCM grade point average are in good academic standing and are eligible to enroll for classes.
Placed on Academic Probation
A student whose cumulative GPA drops below 3.00 will be placed on academic probation. Students placed on academic probation may continue to enroll in classes. Students are encouraged to seek advice from their faculty advisor about future enrollments.
Continued on Academic Probation
Students who are placed on probation and do not increase their GPA to a 3.00 after the first semester on probation are continued for a second semester on probation. Students must raise their GPA to a 3.00 or higher at the end of the third semester on probation or they will become “graduate ineligible.”
Removal from Probation
A student placed on academic probation will continue on probation until the cumulative GPA is 3.00 or higher. When a student on academic probation raises his/her cumulative GPA to 3.00 or above, the student is removed from probation. Transfer credit may not be used to raise the GPA as transfer grades are not posted for graduate students.
Graduate Ineligible Status
Students who have been on academic probation for three consecutive semesters will become ineligible to receive a graduate degree or certificate from UCM and will be removed from their degree/certificate program. Domestic students may continue to take classes, but these classes may not count towards a future graduate degree or certificate. International students may not attend the university if they are in graduate ineligible status.
Reinstatement to a Degree/Certificate Program after Being Graduate Ineligible
Students who are in graduate ineligible status and then raise their GPA to a 3.00 or higher may petition the Graduate Education and Research office to be reinstated to their degree/certificate program.
Grade Appeals
Students who wish to appeal a grade have until the mid-point of the semester following the semester that the grade was issued.
- For grades issued during the fall semester, the appeal must be made before the end of the eighth week of the spring semester.
- For grades issued during the spring semester, the appeal must be made before the end of the sixth week of the summer term.
- For grades issued during any summer session, the appeal must be made before the end of the eighth week of the fall semester.
These appeals should be directed to the instructor who taught the course in question. Please refer to the current Grade Appeal Procedure in the UCM Student Handbook for information regarding this procedure. This policy is not for reviewing instances where a student has been accused of cheating, plagiarism, or other academic dishonesty. Also not covered by this policy are grievances based on discrimination.
Unfinished Work
Unfinished work is denoted with a U grade on the transcript. The U grade is intended for use either in extenuating circumstances beyond the student’s control in the last few days of the semester (illness or death in the family) or if the course is of an individualized nature that requires completion time beyond one semester, e.g., thesis, research report, or similar investigation.
Students with a U grade do not re-enroll in the class during the subsequent or later semester. They simply make up the missing work from the prior semester as arranged with the instructor. Students who need to attend the entire class must re-enroll and pay fees accordingly. Students who have more than one U grade are expected to reduce their course load accordingly in order to complete the unfinished work. It is the student’s responsibility to contact his/her instructor concerning the removal of the U grade. Students may not graduate with a U grade on their record.
Extenuating circumstances. An instructor may report a semester grade of U when, for justifiable reasons, the student has not completed the work of the course. For example, if a student has an extenuating circumstance beyond their control during the last week of the course, an extension may be granted at the discretion of the instructor. The grade will remain a U until the instructor has assigned a new grade. If at the end of the next semester (Fall, Spring or Summer) a new grade has not been provided, the U becomes an F. While the grade change does not occur until the end of the semester, instructors may set earlier deadlines for completion of the missing coursework.
Courses of an individualized nature. Some courses may carry the U grade for more than one semester if the course is of an individualized nature, e.g., thesis, research report, or similar investigation.
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