Academic Warning and dismissal
Page Content
Bachelor's Degree:
- The academic warnings policy starts to apply if you achieved 12 credit hours and more.
- If your cumulative GPA goes less than two points, an academic warning is registered in your records by the end of the semester except the summer semesters.
- A university dismissal is given if your warnings reach five during five consecutive semesters.
- If you have accomplished (80) credits or more of your study plan, and regardless of the number of your warnings, you can't be dismissed for academic reasons. Instead, you will be transferred to the special study program (non-degree) staying under the effect of warnings until raising your GPA to the minimum required. This can apply only when you did not exceed the maximum study duration for bachelor's degree.
- If you had an academic dismissal from a certain track (specialization), you are not entitled to apply for a new enrollment for the same track (specialization) from which you were dismissed.
- If you had an academic dismissal, you may apply for a program different than the one you were dismissed from, or apply for any other track (specialization) within the program from which you were dismissed. You are allowed to submit a request to count the common courses between the two study plans and achieved previously, provided that your new cumulative GPA does not go below two points.
Master's Degree:
- If your cumulative GPA is less than (2.67), an academic warning is registered in your records by the end of the semester except the summer semesters.
- A university dismissal is given if your warnings reach three warnings during three consecutive semesters.
- If you have an academic dismissal from the university, you may re-apply for any of the university's programs, except for the program you were dismissed from.