Graduate School Registration Requirements
Students must pay strict attention to the University and Graduate School rules for classification as full-time students and for graduation. Consult the Graduate School Handbook, the Graduate School Policies and Procedures, and the Graduate School Record for more details.
Registration Requirements for Full-time Student Classification
Those not registered as full-time students risk financial support, the right to delay repayment of student loans, and their visa classifications.Students receiving financial aid from the University (including departmental assistantships, Graduate School fellowships, and research grants) U.S. students who wish to delay repaying federal student loans International students whose visas require full-time student status
And,
there are three ways to be classified as a full-time student:
Register for nine hours or more (most first and second year students). For the purposes of full-time Graduate School status, any University courses count towards the nine hour requirement. The department has additional requirements. In order to be considered in good standing, Ph.D. students are expected to complete the seven core courses in the first year and three additional Ph.D. courses approved by the DGS in each semester of the second year. In the third year, students complete remaining courses and begin substantive work on the dissertation. Any exceptions must be approved by the DGS and faculty in the student's field. The DGS may also consult with the departmental Appeals Committee regarding any exceptions. Students who do not complete the required courses as expected may become ineligible for funding and for continuation in the Ph.D. program.
Register for Econ. 992 (392) or 994 (394) (most students in the spring semester of the third year and after). You must complete (or be completing) all other course requirements before registering for Econ. 992 (392) or 994 (394). University full-time student classification requires only registration in these courses, the department expects substantive progress on your Masters or Ph.D. work. Faculty advisors and committee members offer a great deal of help to students working on their Masters papers or theses and their Ph.D. dissertations. Both you and your faculty committee members want you to be making continual progress each semester. It is important that you seek help and that you respond to the comments and suggestions from your committee in a professional manner.
Apply for a waiver (most students in the first semester of the third year and a few students in the second semester of the third year when required courses were not previously offered). Please note that we have limited funds and thus students receiving tuition remission are limited to registration for the required 15 courses. In order to obtain the wavier, the department files a Graduate School form for you. See the assistant to the DGS shortly before the semester begins. Note that your waiver will be for three or six hours, dependent on the number of hours for which you have registered. If your waiver is for six hours, then you are no longer a full-time student should you drop below six hours. An additional detail is relevant for students taking a course at one of the other universities nearby. In order to take a course at another university, a student must also be enrolled for a course on this campus. See the DGS if you have questions about the options for your enrollment here.
These
rules apply for only the spring and fall semesters. Most graduate
students need to be registered in the summer only if taking masters/doctoral
oral examinations or if graduating.
Registration
Requirements for Doctoral/Masters Examinations,
Papers, Theses,
Dissertations, and Graduation
In
addition to the rules for full-time registration, there are also explicit
registration requirements for Masters and Ph.D. students during the
semesters in which they complete the degree requirements. For
example, students must be registered for three credits of Econ. 992
(392)/994 (394)
respectively during the semester in which the Masters paper is submitted or the Ph.D. dissertation is defended.
Since the two summer school sessions are so short, the Graduate School
allows Ph.D. students who register for one of the summer sessions
to take the doctoral oral exam (preliminary oral exam) or to defend
the Ph.D. dissertation in either summer session. Similarly,
Masters students who are registered for one of the summer sessions
may complete exam or paper requirements during either session.
Students
who are registered in the fall semester may fulfill exam/dissertation/paper
requirements between the end of the fall semester up to, and including,
the day before classes begin in the spring semester. Ph.D.
students who are registered for the fall semester and successfully
defend the dissertation before the first day of classes in the spring
semester, but do not meet the deadline for fall graduation, are
NOT required to register for the spring semester in order to graduate
in the spring. Similarly, Masters students who are registered
for the fall semester and fulfill the exam/paper requirements
before the first day of classes in the spring semester, but do not
meet the deadline for fall graduation, are NOT required to register
for the spring semester in order to graduate in the spring.
Students must, of course, meet the deadlines for spring-semester
graduation. The rules for scheduling examinations between other
semesters are exactly analogous. Please note that scheduling
examinations during the summer or between semesters may be difficult
since many faculty are away from the University during these times.
Be
sure to read the Graduate School registration rules carefully in
order to be appropriately registered during each semester in which
you plan to take an examination or submit a paper/thesis/dissertation.
| Graduate Program Home Page | Last edited 03/20/2008 |