
[President's Message] [NSC Directory Info.] [Calendar] [About Nevada State College] [Admissions Information] [Registration & Records] [Residency Regulations] [Financial Aid] [Student Rights & Responibilities] [Degrees] [Core Curriculum] [Applied Science] [Biology] [Business Administration] [Education] [English] [Environmental Resource & Science] [History] [Integrated Studies] [Law Enforcement] [Mathematics] [Nursing] [Psychology] [Speech Pathology] [Visual Media & Computing] [College Terminology] [Abbreviations] [Course Descriptions] [Faculty & Staff]
College
Terminology
Academic
Disqualification - The involuntary removal of a student from his/her academic program for unsatisfactory academic performance following academic probation.
Academic
Probation - Occurs when a student-s cumulative NSC GPA is below warning threshold as determined by credit.
Academic
Status - Determined by regulations governing good standing, warning, probation, and disqualification.
Academic
Warning - Occurs when a student-s cumulative NSC GPA is below 2.0 but above warning threshold as determined by credit.
Admission - Formal application and acceptance in a degree program.
Advisor,
advisee - The advisor is assigned by the college to assist each student in planning the proper academic program. The student is called the advisor's advisee.
Audit - To take a course without earning credit or grade.
Core
Curriculum - Group of classes, minimum of 32 credits, in different subject areas that are required of all students.
Co-requisite - A course that must be taken simultaneously with another.
Credit - Described in semester hours, a credit is defined as three hours of work per week for one semester. Usually this work is made up of one period in class plus two hours of preparation for lecture-seminar classes, or three hours of laboratory classes.
Credit
Load - The total credits for which a student is registered in any registration period.
Curriculum - A structured set of learning objectives.
Department - An academic unit of a college.
Extracurricular - Those activities that are part of student life, but are not part of the regular course of study, such as debate, dramatics and athletics.
GPA - Grade Point Average.
Good
Standing - A 2.0 in any given semester as well as a cumulative 2.0 on all college work. Students must be in good academic standing to be eligible to receive financial aid.
Grade
Points -
Grades are evaluated in terms of quality points. For each credit of a letter
grade completed, the following grade points are earned:
|
Grade |
Grade
Points Earned |
|
A |
4.0
grade points |
|
A- |
3.7
grade points |
|
B+ |
3.3
grade points |
|
B |
3.0
grade points |
|
B- |
2.7
grade points |
|
C+ |
2.3
grade points |
|
C |
2.0
grade points |
|
D+ |
1.3
grade points |
|
D |
1.0
grade point |
|
D- |
0.7
grade point |
|
F |
0
grade points |
In
order to graduate, students must have an average of two grade points for each
credit attempted for regular letter grade, including all courses that are
failed or repeated.
Incomplete - The "I" symbol is a mark that is given when a student has been performing satisfactory work, but for a reason beyond the student's control, has been unable to complete the required work for the course. Incomplete grades revert to grades of "F" if not made up within one regular semester.
Major - Primary subject or field of study.
Minor - Secondary subject or field of study.
Non-degree
Student - Special student status for students not seeking a degree. Registration is limited to 15 undergraduate credits per semester. Non-degree students are not eligible for financial aid.
Non-resident
Tuition - Non-resident students pay tuition in addition to per-credit fees.
Not
Reported - The symbol "NR" is assigned when an instructor does not indicate a grade for a student in a course. "NR" must be resolved by the end of the next regular semester, or it will revert to an -F.-
Prerequisite - The preliminary requirement that must be met before a certain course may be taken.
Registration - Enrolling in classes.
Registration
Fees - All students pay per-credit registration fees.
Regular
Student - A degree-seeking student who is officially admitted to the college.
Required
Subjects - The subjects that are prescribed for the completion of a particular program.
Resident
Alien - A student attending the college as a permanent immigrant who has not attained U.S. citizenship.
Resident
Credit - Credit earned for regular classes conducted on campus, as well as correspondence classes, continuing education classes, and other distance education courses offered through Nevada State College.
Schedule, Class - The semester list of courses offered, including the names of the teachers, the days, hours, and locations of the classes.
Schedule,
Student - A listing of the courses the student takes each semester.
Semester - 75 instructional days.
Special
Fees - Additional fees , such as lab fees, required.
Suspension
(Disciplinary) - The involuntary separation of a student from the college for unsatisfactory conduct.
Transcript
- A certified copy of the student's permanent academic record on file in the Office of Admissions. The transcript lists each course the student has taken and the final grade received.
Undergraduate - A student who has not yet obtained a bachelor's degree.
Withdrawal - The act of officially
leaving the college. A student may also drop individual courses without
withdrawing from the college. Consult the schedule of classes for specific
dates in which the dropping of classes is allowed. Students who drop classes
between the seventh day of classes and the end of the eighth week of classes
receive grades of "W" on their transcripts. Complete withdrawal from
the college results in "W" grades if the student is passing classes
at the time of complete withdrawal.
Course Information
Course Numbers
Remedial courses (099 or lower courses): Open to freshmen and sophomores; may serve as
pre-requisites for courses but do not count toward total credits or fulfill
degree requirements.
Lower-division (100 - and 200 - level courses): Open to freshmen and sophomores; may satisfy
prerequisite requirements for upper division courses.
Upper-division (300 - and 400 - level courses): Mainly for juniors and seniors; may require
prerequisites. Freshmen and sophomores are not permitted to take upper-division
courses without permission from their advisor or academic department.
NOTE:
Class periods are 50 minutes, unless otherwise stated.
Course Fees
Special
course fees are indicated with the course.
Advance Course
Approvals, Prerequisites and Attendance Requirements
You
must obtain advisor approval and, as required, satisfy the course and/or test
score placement prerequisite for your registration to be valid when you pay
fees. Each department is authorized to cancel the registration of any student
who does not:
Non-degree
students: 15 credits
Degree
students: 21 credits
Students
may not enroll in more than the maximum number of credits. Permission of the
college dean is required for credit overloads. Approval must be presented in
person in the Office of the Registrar. Registration is audited on a regular
basis. Students attempting to register for more than the maximum number of
credits will have their registrations cancelled.
Symbols
(3+0), (3+3), etc. show the number of 50-minute class periods of lecture (or recitation or discussion) plus the total number of periods of laboratory (or workshop) per week. The number of class periods is not necessarily the same as the number of times the class meets. Thus (3+0) means the course meets for three lecture periods per week and does not have any laboratory periods. Likewise, (3+3) means the course meets for three periods of lecture and three periods of laboratory per week.
1, 2, etc. credits, which appear after the parenthesis indicate the number of credits the course carries each semester.
S/U
(in italics) means the course is graded Satisfactory or Unsatisfactory only.
Meeting Day
Abbreviations
The
following abbreviations are used for class meeting day(s):
M Monday
T Tuesday
W Wednesday
R Thursday
F Friday
S Saturday
U Sunday