Graduate School Policies

02.24GRADUATE CREDITS AND STANDARDS OF SCHOLARSHIP
02.24.10Registration
Students must be appropriately registered for courses. Those who are not on the published grade list for a course may not receive a grade or credit for that course. Students are advised to utilize Self-Service Banner (SSB), accessible through the TUportal, to confirm billing and registration status, particularly when adding a course, dropping a class, or otherwise revising their roster. All students are responsible for ensuring that their registration is accurate. Note that any student who is registered for a course but does not attend will be billed for the course and will receive a final grade of “F” from the instructor.
02.24.11Grades
02.24.11.01Courses graded A, A-, B+, B, B-, C+, C, C-, D+, D, D-, and F are used to calculate the graduate grade point average (GPA). No grade below a "C-" can be used to fulfill any graduate requirement.
An "R" (Registered) grade indicates registration for the preliminary/comprehensive exam or a thesis, dissertation, or final project that is still in progress—and its use is restricted to this purpose. Therefore, the only courses that can receive an “R” grade are:
9993 - Master's Comprehensive Examination
9994 - Doctoral Preliminary/Candidacy Examination
9995 - Thesis/Project or Master of Fine Arts Credits
9996 - Master's Thesis Credits
9998 - Dissertation Proposal/Candidacy
9999 - Dissertation Credits
Courses numbered 9993 through 9999 cannot be graded “I” (Incomplete). These ongoing examinations and research projects require registration every term until their completion. Only the number of required s.h. for the completion of each of the aforementioned courses in the published program of study for each graduate degree offered by a department and found on the Graduate Bulletin webpage can and must be changed from an “R” grade to an assigned final grade of A, A-, B+, B, B-, C+, C, C-, D+, D, D-, F, or P. All other “R” grades in excess of the required published s.h. for a program of study found on the Graduate Bulletin webpage remain on the transcript for all terms as “R.” The GPA does not include courses designated "R." In addition, “R”-graded courses in excess of the amount required for degree completion are not included in the number of hours completed nor the number of hours passed.
The "R" grade is not—and cannot be used as—a substitute for an "I" grade. The "I" grade is appropriate for a one-term didactic course that will be completed within a year or assigned the contracted default grade.
"P" indicates Pass. Individual schools may authorize the use of Pass/Fail only for practica, seminars, and other courses for which traditional grading is inappropriate and only when all students are graded on a P/F basis. No grade points are assigned to either the “P” or “F” grade. In a course with the P/F grading option, “P” is equivalent to A, A-, B+, B, B-, C+, C, or C-, and “F” is equivalent to D+, D, D-, or F.
No grade points are assigned to either the "CR" (Credit) or "NC" (No Credit) grade. "CR" is equivalent to A, A-, B+, B, B-, C+, C, or C-, while "NC" is equivalent to D+, D, D-, or F.
02.24.11.02A student who receives more than two grades below "B-" or more than one grade of "F" is dismissed for failure to maintain satisfactory grades.
02.24.11.03A minimum cumulative GPA of 3.0 is required in order to graduate.
02.24.11.04A doctoral student must take at least 2 s.h. of Dissertation Research (9999) after having been advanced to candidacy. Because these courses reflect continuing work on a single project, the student receives a grade (A, A-, B+, B, B-, C+, C, C-, D+, D, D-, F or Pass/Fail, depending on the departmental grading system) for only the final term after having fulfilled this requirement, which entails filing the final approved dissertation with the Graduate School.
02.24.11.05To remain in Academic Good Standing at Temple University, a non-matriculated or matriculated graduate student must achieve a term GPA of at least 3.0 for each term and maintain a cumulative GPA of at least 3.0 for all work completed at Temple University. The policy on Academic Good Standing operates in conjunction with Graduate School Policy 02.24.11.02 concerning substandard grades.
02.24.12Incompletes
An instructor may assign an Incomplete ("I") to a student who does not complete all coursework. The "I" may be changed to a letter grade if the student completes the coursework within one calendar year.
02.24.12.01The student must file a contract with the faculty member of record stating what outstanding work remains to be completed. The faculty member must sign the contract and retain it in the student’s permanent departmental file. All work must be completed, graded, and the change of grade filed with the Office of the University Registrar within one calendar year of the assignment of the Incomplete.
02.24.12.02.01 Change to Incomplete Policy
Effective Fall 2003, the President instituted a policy change regarding Incompletes (see Policy 02.10.13: Incomplete Coursework Policy at http://policies.temple.edu/PDF/41.pdf) for graduate and undergraduate students. As part of the Incomplete contract, the faculty member must assign a default grade that will apply if work is not completed per the contract or within one year of the assignment of the Incomplete grade.
02.24.12.03A student who receives a Permanent Incomplete and wishes to receive credit for that course is required to re-register, pay tuition, and retake that course to receive a grade.
02.24.13Credits for Coursework in a Degree Program
No course may be used to satisfy a credit hour requirement for more than one degree, except where course requirements for one degree (master’s degree) are required for a more advanced degree (e.g., Ph.D.) or have been designated as eligible to satisfy the requirements of an officially designated dual degree program.
02.24.14Repeating a Course for Additional Credit
A student may repeat an Independent Study or other course for additional credit if the course content varies each term as designated in the Graduate Bulletin.
02.24.15Repeating a Course for Credit
A student may, with the permission of the advisor and graduate program director, retake a course once in order to improve the grade. The higher grade is used to calculate the graduate GPA. The s.h. for the course are counted only once toward graduation requirements.
02.24.16Graduate Credit for Undergraduate Courses
A graduate student may take an undergraduate upper division course for graduate credit only with the advanced written permission of the student’s advisor and the dean of the school/college, prior to the first day of classes. Permission is granted only if the graduate student is required to complete more advanced work than that required of undergraduates, and the "Request to Take an Undergraduate Course for Graduate Credit" form, found at http://www.temple.edu/grad/forms/, specifies the nature and extent of the additional work (e.g., a research paper or project). To receive graduate credit, the student must pay graduate tuition and fees.
02.24.17Enrollment in Undergraduate Courses Not for Graduate Credit
A student admitted to a graduate program may enroll in an undergraduate course to elevate her/his level of preparation to the standard expected of an entering graduate student, but such courses cannot be used to satisfy a graduate degree requirement.
02.24.18Prerequisites
02.24.18.01A prerequisite is preparatory work that must be completed prior to undertaking specified coursework in the degree program. Credits earned completing prerequisites do not count toward the total number of s.h. required for the degree.
02.24.18.02Grades earned in prerequisite courses, if graduate level, are included in the graduate GPA and, irrespective of level, in the determination of standards of scholarship.
02.24.19Credit for Coursework Taken as a Non-Matriculated Student
A matriculated student may be allowed credit for up to 9 s.h. of graduate coursework, graded "B" or higher, taken before matriculation. These credits may be accepted in addition to the Advanced Standing Credit allowed if approved by the dean and the graduate council or other governance body of the school/college.
02.24.20Advanced Standing Credit (defined as credit for coursework taken prior to matriculation and outside of Temple University)
02.24.20.01Graduate coursework taken at an accredited institution prior to matriculation, and graded "B" or higher, may be accepted toward a Temple University master’s degree. (Refer to Graduate School Policy 02.24.21.02 for limitations.)
02.24.20.02Graduate coursework taken at an accredited institution prior to matriculation and graded "B" or higher as part of a master's degree program may be accepted for Advanced Standing Credit toward a doctoral degree. For doctoral programs that do not require the student to complete a master's degree at Temple University, the number of Advanced Standing Credits that may be accepted by a doctoral program cannot exceed the number of graduate s.h. required for the master's degree in the same or a closely related discipline at Temple University. Individual programs may have more restrictive limits on the number of graduate s.h. eligible to be considered for Advanced Standing Credit. The deans of the school/college and the graduate council or other governance body determine the courses to be deemed eligible.
02.24.20.03For a student to receive Advanced Standing Credit, the graduate program director must make a recommendation to the dean of the school/college to accept the student’s credits from a master’s degree or other graduate work taken prior to matriculation in the degree program, whether the previous work was taken at Temple University or at another institution. The dean of the school/college has final authority over accepting the recommendation to grant Advanced Standing Credit in individual cases as long as the number and type of credits accepted do not exceed those allowed by the Graduate School.
02.24.21Transfer Credit (defined as credit for coursework taken following matriculation and outside of Temple University)
02.24.21.01 The dean of the school/college and the graduate council or other governance body may accept a limited number of Transfer Credits. The coursework must be graduate level, taken at an accredited institution, and graded "B" or higher. (Refer to Graduate School Policy 02.24.21.02 for limitations.)
02.24.21.02The combined number of Transfer Credits and Advanced Standing Credits (see Graduate School Policies 02.24.20.01 and 02.24.21.01) that may be accepted by a master’s program cannot exceed 20% of the s.h. required for the degree (e.g., in a 30-s.h. master’s degree, a maximum of 6 s.h. of credit is allowed).
02.24.21.03A doctoral program may accept as many Transfer Credits as have been approved by the dean of the school/college up to the limit established by the Graduate School.
02.24.21.04The Graduate School may be petitioned for an exception if the request is supported by the student's program and school/college.
02.24.22Auditing
A student may audit a course with the written permission of the instructor at the time of registration. For this purpose, a Special Approval Form must be signed by the instructor and submitted along with a Registration/Schedule Revision Form. The student must register for the course and pay the regular per-credit fee.
02.24.22.01 The registration for any course may not be changed from audit to credit or vice versa after the second week of classes during the Fall or Spring term or after the first three days of classes during the Summer sessions.
02.24.22.02Audited courses do not meet prerequisite or graduation requirements.
02.24.23Withdrawal
02.24.23.01A student may "drop" a class during the first two weeks of the Fall or Spring term or Summer sessions and during customized drop/add/withdrawal dates set by Temple University. The course is removed from the transcript. The student is not financially responsible for the dropped course(s).
A student who wishes to discontinue a course after the drop period has ended may "withdraw" from a class during weeks three through nine of the Fall or Spring term; during weeks three and four of Summer sessions; and during customized drop/add/withdrawal dates set by Temple University. The course is recorded on the transcript with the notation of "W." The student is financially responsible for the course(s) from which s/he has withdrawn.
02.24.23.02A student who must withdraw due to circumstances beyond her/his control may petition for an "excused withdrawal" or "withdrawal with approved excuse." The extenuating circumstances that inhibit continued enrollment at Temple University are limited to serious medical conditions, serious family emergencies, military deployment, the student's death, and other catastrophic circumstances.
An excused withdrawal is generally only approved for all courses in a term. In exceptional cases, an excused withdrawal can be approved for a single course when the need to withdraw is directly attributed to requirements related to that course. To request an excused withdrawal, a "Petition for Withdrawal with Approved Excuse," found at http://www.temple.edu/vpus/documents/withdrawal_approved_excuse_forms.pdf, must be filed within one year from the end date of the term for which the student seeks the excused withdrawal. If the excused withdrawal is granted:
  • The course is recorded on the transcript with the notation of "WE."
  • The student may be financially responsible for courses from which s/he has withdrawn with an approved excuse.
  • A student who is granted an excused withdrawal for medical reasons will not be permitted to return to the university until s/he presents a statement from a medical provider showing that s/he is medically ready to return to the rigors of academic work.