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Any student may become a computer science pre-major by filing the appropriate form with the University Registrar. It is advisable to do this early to ensure receiving information about the major and staying advised of any changes that may be made in degree requirements. Declaration of a major will also enable participation in activities associated with the degree program such as the Student Advisory Committee.
Only computer science majors, computer engineering majors, and computer science minors can take upper-division (3000 or higher) computer science classes. Advancement to full major status is a competitive process. To be considered for full major status in computer science, a student must have:
A student may apply for full major status no earlier than the semester during which he or she expects to complete these requirements. Applications may be submitted any time during the first session of each semester. (However, no applications will be accepted during the fall semester of 2000.) Students whose applications are accepted will be advanced to full major status effective the following semester. (For example, students who apply between January 8 and March 1, 2001, and who are subsequently accepted, will become full majors at the beginning of the summer 2001 semester.) Students whose applications are not accepted are free to reapply during subsequent semesters.
The School determines how many new majors will be admitted each semester based on laboratory facilities, computer resources, and available faculty. A key consideration in the admission process is the composite grade point average of each student in the required pre-major classes listed above. At the discretion of the School, additional factors may be taken into consideration. (For example, applicants may be required to take an admission test or to have an interview with a faculty member.) Complete admission requirements will be specified on the application form.
No pre-major class may be taken more than twice. If a class is repeated, the grade received the second time is used. If a student receives any grade in a class--including W (withdrawal), I (incomplete), or V (audit)--the student is considered to have taken the class. Only three classes may be repeated without penalty. For any additional classes that a student repeats, only 80% of the grade points received in the repeated class will be used in the GPA calculation. No student admitted in the last six years has had a GPA in the pre-major classes of less than 3.3. Keep this in mind when estimating your chances for admission.
If credit is granted for any of the above classes based on advanced placement test scores or courses taken at other schools, grades are assigned for use in the calculation. Check with the Computer Science Academic Counselor for details.
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