| Registration
Policies
Reviewing
and Printing the Registration Schedule • Adding
a Course • Dropping a Course • Withdrawing• Credit
Limit • Exceptions to Credit Limit • Restrictions
on Registration • Late Fees • Instructor's
Permission • Language Elements Courses
• Placement • Independent
Academic Work • Prohibitions • Summer
Courses at JHU•
Other JHU Divisions • Summer Courses Other Divisions •
Undergraduates register for intersession and the spring
semester in November, and register for the summer and fall terms in April.
In the School of Arts and Sciences, students meet with their faculty
and/or academic advisor well in advance of the registration period. The
advisor grants permission to register to an advisee by releasing an electronic
hold. Questions about course selection should be discussed with the faculty
and academic advisors prior to registration.
Each student in the School of Engineering must schedule an appointment
with his/her faculty advisor prior to registration. Engineering Advising
Week is set aside in early November and early April for these meetings.
Students should come to this appointment prepared to discuss courses
required for the major, as well as other academic and career issues.
Once the faculty member releases the electronic hold, the student can
register online.
It is important that students keep all copies of registration
and add/drop forms in case there is any question about which courses
they are taking and whether a course is being taken for Satisfactory/
Unsatisfactory credit. It is not possible to correct a registration error
unless the student or the university has a copy of the relevant form.
Reviewing
and Printing the Registration Schedule
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Students are responsible for verifying their
official schedules by going online to the Registrar’s website to
review their course schedules. Students should also print a copy of the
schedules for their records. All changes to schedules should be verified
by printing a new copy of the amended schedule. As a final precaution,
students are advised to check their schedules online prior to the add,
drop and withdrawal deadlines. Changes to a student’s schedule
will not be approved after these deadlines have passed. Failure to review
and print out a registration confirmation will not be considered grounds
for approving exceptions to these deadlines.
Adding
a Course
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Students are expected to give serious thought
to their course selections when preregistering for courses so that schedules
do not require adjustment when the semester begins. However, during the
first two weeks of each semester, students may make necessary changes.
During this time students may add and drop courses without written approval,
unless the course is filled or will cause a credit overload. If the course
will cause a credit overload (see page 6), AS students need a signature
from the AS Advising Office, while EN students need their faculty advisor’s
signature and the approval of the EN Advising Office. An instructor’s
signature is required to add a course that is filled. By the end of the
second week of classes, students should have the schedule they want to
keep.
If the course is a four-week course offered during the fall or spring
terms, courses may be added only during the first week of classes.
When adding courses in other divisions or at schools in the cooperative
program, Homewood undergraduates must follow the deadlines set by the
host school or division.
Dropping
a Course
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Courses may be dropped from the student’s record until the
end of the sixth week of the semester, provided that the student remains
registered for a minimum of 12 credits. The faculty advisor’s approval
to drop a course is required only for engineering students dropping after
the second week of classes.
If the course is a four-week course, drops may be made during the first
week of the course without a record on the transcript. The course may
be dropped with a W notation during the second week of classes (with
the approval of the faculty advisor).
The rules and procedures of the host school apply when undergraduates
drop courses in other divisions of the university or at one of the schools
that participate in the academic cooperative program. In the School of
Public Health, the drop deadlines are based on the quarter system, not
the semester system that is used in other JHU divisions.
Withdrawing
from a Course
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After the end of the sixth week and until
the end of the eighth week, a student may withdraw from a course with
a W on the academic record. Engineering students need the written approval
of their faculty advisor and the Engineering Advising Office. A record
of the course will remain on the academic record with a W appearing in
the grade column to indicate that the student registered and then withdrew
from the course. Students are not allowed to withdraw from a course after
the end of the eighth week of the semester.
Credit
Limit
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Credit is an approximate measure of the work required in a course.
For undergraduate courses, the number of credits is normally equal to
the number of hours that the class meets each week. Some laboratory courses
are exceptions to this rule, meeting more hours per week than the credits
awarded. Graduate-level courses are generally awarded the same number
of credits as an upper-level undergraduate course (3 credits).
For Arts and Sciences students, the average course load is 15 credits
per semester for eight semesters. For Engineering students, the standard
load is 16-18 credits. AS freshmen are limited to 16.5 credits, while
AS upperclassmen are limited to 18.5 credits. EN freshmen are limited
to 18 credits (18.5 if including a foreign language), while EN upperclassmen
are limited to 19.5 credits. Students must maintain full-time status
by registering for at least 12 credits.
Students in the School of Arts and Sciences are
encouraged to register for the standard undergraduate load of 15 credits
each semester. While upperclass AS students may take up to 18.5 credits
if they are in good academic standing, given the very demanding nature
of courses at Hopkins in all fields, students are strongly discouraged
from taking more than five courses per semester. Even if perfect grades
can be maintained, course overloads can contribute significantly to
a student’s feelings
of stress and anxiety. Moreover, academic overload often restricts the
student’s life in other important ways, affecting health, happiness,
and future success. According to a recent study of premedical education,
for example, medical schools are looking for students with well-balanced
achievements and skills in addition to research competence.
Exceptions
to These Credit Limits
Arts and Sciences students who wish to take
a credit overload must meet one of the following criteria:
- Double
degree students who are taking courses at both Peabody and Homewood
- Formally declared Public Health majors
may take up to an additional six Homewood credits in the second quarter
at the School of Public Health
- Freshmen taking five courses including a foreign language
course along with a 1-credit lab (when taken in conjunction with the
lecture course)
- Students taking excess credits due to university mandate,
e.g., if the Romance Languages Department requires a student to take
French Elements (4.5 credits) rather than Intermediate French (3.5
credits), or if the East Asian Studies Department moves a student from
Intermediate Chinese to Accelerated Chinese
- Seniors in their eighth semester
- Upperclass students with a 3.5 cumulative GPA who
have requested and been granted a waiver to take an additional course
for other reasons
- Students who exceed the limit because they are taking
a 1 credit music lesson at the Peabody Conservatory
Credit overloads for engineering students are approved
on a case-by-case basis. Engineering students who wish to overload
need their faculty advisor’s signature, then final approval by
the Engineering Advising Office. Usually, the student’s most
recent academic performance is a factor in the decision. Freshman
are very rarely granted credit overloads, unless the course they
want to add is a foreign language class worth more than 3 credits.
Additional Exceptions for Freshman
- Placement by professor in another course for more
credits
- Peabody lessons (1 or 2 credits)
- ROTC required classes (1 credit)
- Biophysics majors taking Calculus (4), Chemistry and
Lab (4), Physics and Lab (5), Topics in Biophysics (1), and a humanities/social
science elective (3)
- Taking five classes and two are foreign languages,
where at least one is a continuation of previous study
Restrictions on Registration
Holds on Registration
Students who have three or more Incomplete grades from the previous semester
will have a hold placed on registration activity. The student must
have the approval signature from the advising office of their school
to register, add, or drop. Holds may be placed on a student’s
registration for many other reasons as well: outstanding financial
obligations, or concerns related to international status, insurance
and health clearances. A student whose registration has been placed
on hold for a non-academic reason must obtain written clearance from
the office or offices that placed the hold on the registration and
submit the clearance to the Registrar’s Office.
Each student must pay the tuition or make an appropriate
financial arrangement to do so with the Office of Student Accounts before
registration can be confirmed. Transcripts may not be released for students
with unpaid balances. A student will not be permitted to register if
the financial account is in arrears from a previous semester because
of unpaid tuition, rent, library or parking fines, or other university
bills.
Late Registration
Fees
A student who registers for a semester after the prescribed registration
period will be charged a late fee of $100 to $300, depending on when
registration is completed. See the academic calendar for the relevant
dates. Registration in the School of Arts and Sciences and the School
of Engineering is not permitted after the end of the second week of the
semester. Students must register on time, even when they lack sufficient
funds. The university provides many financing alternatives that permit
students to register in most financial situations.
Prohibition on Registering
for Courses that Meet at the Same Time
Registering for two classes that meet at the same time or overlapping
times is not permitted except as a temporary measure during the first
weeks of the semester when students are still deciding on which classes
to take. By the end of the first two weeks of classes, students must
eliminate time conflicts from their schedules.
Restrictions
on Equivalent Courses and Courses Taken Out of Sequence
Courses that are sequential in
nature, e.g., elementary, intermediate, and advanced language courses,
or the Calculus sequence, must be taken in their proper order.
Credit will be awarded only once for equivalent
courses covering the same material. Examples of equivalent courses
are Intermediate French and Advanced Intermediate French, AP Chemistry
and Introductory I and II, Chemistry, AP Calc AB and Calculus I. This
restriction does not apply to the Expository Writing course which may
be taken twice. Be aware that departments may change course numbering
or titles without changing the course content. Students who believe
that they have registered for an equivalent course should consult with
their academic advising office.
The following restrictions apply to overlapping
and the sequencing of courses in the Mathematics and Applied Mathematics
and Statistics Departments:
- Students who earn credit for 110.201 Linear
Algebra cannot receive credit for the combined course 550.291 Linear
Algebra and Differential Equations or for the course 110.212 Honors
Linear Algebra.
- Students who earn credit for 110.302
Differential Equations cannot receive credit for 550.291 Linear Algebra
and Differential Equations.
- Students who earn credit for 110.202 Calculus
III cannot receive credit for 110.211 Honors Calculus III.
- A student who earns credit in 550.291 Linear
Algebra and Differential Equations may receive credit for further
study of linear algebra or differential equations by enrolling for
independent study while auditing the appropriate course. Normally
students will earn 2 credits for such an independent study, but the
number of credits may vary and is to be decided by the faculty sponsor.
- Students who earn credit for 550.310 Probability
and Statistics for the Physical Sciences and Engineering cannot receive
credit for 550.311 Probability and Statistics for the Biological
and Medical Sciences.
- Students who earn credit for 550.426 Introduction
to Stochastic Processes cannot receive credit for 550.427 Stochastic
Processes in Finance.
- Students cannot earn credit for 550.111
Statistical Analysis I after receiving credit for 550.310 Probability
and Statistics for the Physical Sciences and Engineering, 550.311 Probability
and Statistics for the Biological and Medical Sciences, or 550.427
Introduction to Probability.
- Students cannot earn credit
for 550.310 Probability and Statistics for the Physical Sciences
and Engineering or 550.311 Probability and Statistics for the Biological
and Medical Sciences after receiving credit for 550.420 Introduction
to Probability or 550.430 Introduction to Statistics.
Instructor’s Permission
Graduate (600-level) courses in the School of Arts and Sciences and the School
of Engineering, courses offered in the graduate divisions of the university
and some advanced undergraduate courses require the instructor’s approval
signature on a registration form. Engineering students also need their faculty
advisor’s approval. The Registrar’s Office will not enroll a
student in such a course without the instructor’s signature. Therefore,
students cannot add these courses online, but must use a paper registration
or add/drop form. English, Writing Seminars, and Film and Media Studies hold
preregistration hours for majors in the weeks before registration begins.
Contact the department for information about how to preregister for a class.
Registering for Independent Academic Work
“Independent academic work” is the collective term used to encompass
independent study, research, and academic internships. Independent study means
a program of study and reading under the tutelage of a faculty member. Academic
credit for independent study is based on work equivalent to class-based courses.
Research involves planning and conducting experiments, collection and analysis
of data, and the reporting of results. Academic internships are practical work
experiences which have an academic component as certified by a member of the
faculty.
All forms of independent academic work require early
planning with a faculty sponsor. To receive academic credit, the independent
academic work must include some activity, exercise or product that can
be evaluated by a regular member of the AS/EN faculty whose field of
expertise is closely enough related to the work for the faculty sponsor
to evaluate the work competently and certify that it merits academic
credit.
Academic credit for independent academic work must be
sponsored by a full-time member of the Homewood faculty. This is the
case whether the work is done on campus or not. The work supervisor and
the faculty sponsor may be the same individual. If the faculty sponsor
is not the work supervisor, the work supervisor must provide the faculty
sponsor with a report on the student’s achievements while doing
the independent project and the faculty member must certify how much
academic credit the project merits.
Students who wish to pursue independent academic work
must begin by discussing their ideas with an appropriate faculty sponsor.
That discussion must focus on what type of project the student envisions
and what possibilities for academic credit the faculty member envisions.
If the student and faculty member agree on the type of project and its
academic value, then the student should find a suitable research or work
environment for the project.
No more than three credits may be earned for independent
study or research in one semester or summer; only one credit may be earned
for an academic internship during one semester or summer. Additionally,
no more than 6 credits of any type of “independent work” may
be earned in one academic year. The academic year begins in June with
the first summer session and ends in May at the conclusion of the spring
semester. Independent work done for academic credit must be unpaid. Credits
for research and independent study may vary from 1-3 credits and may
be graded with either letters grades (A, B, etc.) or Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory.
Credit for an internship is limited to 1 credit, and the grading method
is Satisfactory/ Unsatisfactory only.
As with other academic courses, students must register for independent
work by the end of the second week of the semester. Students must also
observe the registration and add/drop deadlines in January Intersession
and JHU Summer School.
Although academic credit is awarded for independent academic
work, area designations are not assigned and the credit may not be used
to satisfy the distribution requirement. The use of credit for independent
academic work to satisfy the requirements of a major or minor is subject
to prior written approval by the appropriate department or program.
Registering for Summer Courses at JHU
The Office of Summer Programs at Johns Hopkins offers a wide range of
undergraduate KSAS and WSE credit courses over two five-week terms each
summer. The majority of the courses are at Homewood, but Hopkins offers
summer study abroad courses and summer on-line courses, too. Both grades
and credits for JHU summer courses taken after matriculating at JHU are
entered on the student’s academic record. Only one course per summer
may be taken for Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory credit.
A course listing is published at http://www.jhu.edu/summer.
Students may register online or in person beginning with the spring registration
up to the summer session deadlines, which are published in the web site
above.
Summer courses in other divisions must be taken for a grade. Credit is
not given for mini or weekend courses in the Carey Business School and
the School of Education.
Courses offered in the summer program at the School of Advanced International
Studies will be treated as transfer credits in the schools of Arts and
Sciences and Engineering.
Registering for Courses in Other JHU Divisions During
the Fall and Spring Semesters
Qualified undergraduates may take courses at other divisions of the university
by registering in person with the Homewood Registrar. In addition to
the registration or add/drop form, students must submit a Supplemental
Registration Form for Interdivisional Registration. Forms are available
in the Homewood Registrar’s Office in 75 Garland and in the Office
of Academic Advising, Garland, Suite 3A, or the Office of Engineering
Advising, 126 NEB.
Peabody Conservatory
Performance courses at the Peabody Conservatory may either be as part
of a grade and credit, or may be audited. Graded performance courses
will receive 1 credit per semester unless taken for a double degree
program. With the approval of a student’s teacher, performances
that are audited may appear on a student’s academic record.
Homewood undergraduates who are not enrolled in a music
major, minor, or degree program may take only one nonperformance course
per semester at the Conservatory or Preparatory. These students may also
take one performance course concurrently with the approval of the student’s
academic advising office. Students taking lessons for the first time
at Peabody must also complete an Extension Application form which is
available in the same locations as the Supplemental Registration Form.
Students may take private lessons at Peabody Conservatory
with an instructor who is a Conservatory faculty member or a Preparatory
faculty member approved by the Deans of the Preparatory and Conservatory.
Acceptance is on a space available basis following an audition to demonstrate
intermediate or advanced skills. Auditions for Conservatory lessons are
held in September. Students will be notified of their audition time by
letter from the Conservatory Registrar’s Office. Space in lessons
is limited and registration is on a first-come, first-served basis. There
is a $165 fee per semester for one half-hour lesson per week. Students
who wish to take additional lessons will be charged for them.
The Peabody schedule and deadlines can differ from those
at Homewood. Students taking courses and lessons at the Conservatory
must check these dates in the Peabody Master Schedule of Courses.
Students who wish to take beginning level music lessons
may enroll through the Preparatory on a non-credit basis.
Students who have a musical background, or who wish to
study music-related academic subjects to satisfy the distribution requirement,
may take the following courses at the Peabody Conservatory that have
H, S, or W designations:
| Distribution Requirement Designators
for Peabody courses |
| H |
530.411 |
Keyboard Literature I |
| H |
530.412 |
Keyboard Literature II |
| H |
530.413 |
Keyboard Literature III |
| H |
530.414 |
Keyboard Literature IV |
| H |
—.211–212 |
Foreign Language (second year of
study) |
| H |
610.311 |
History of Music |
| H |
610.312 |
History of Music II |
| H |
610.313 |
History of Music III |
| H |
610.314 |
History of Music IV |
| H |
610.421 |
Popular Music Since the 1950’s |
| H |
610.555 |
Music and Culture |
| H |
530.476 |
English and American Song |
| H |
530.470 |
Italian Song |
| H |
530.480 |
French Melodie |
| H |
530.481 |
German Lieder |
| H |
310.515-516 |
Music Now |
| H |
530.537 |
Poetry in English |
| H |
530.538 |
Poetry in Italian |
| H |
530.539 |
Poetry in German |
| H |
530.540 |
Poetry in French |
| S |
290.111 |
Introduction to Psychology |
| H |
530.441–442 |
Baroque Ornamentation and Style |
| H |
530.535.536 |
Opera Styles and Traditions |
| H |
530.473–474 |
Opera Literature |
| H |
530.554 |
Choral Repertoire |
| H |
530.670 |
Operas of Strauss |
| H |
530.671 |
Operas of Mozart |
| H |
530.672 |
Verdi |
| H |
530.673 |
Wagner’s Ring |
| H |
610.555 |
Musical Culture |
| H |
610.421 |
Popular Music since the 1950’s |
The Carey Business School and The School of Education
Students may register for approved courses in these two schools on a
case-by-case basis. In order to register in the Carey Business School
or the School of Education, students in Arts and Sciences and Engineering
programs should use the Interdivisional Registration Form, available
from the Homewood Registrar’s Office, which requires permission
of their academic advisor and the appropriate school program director
or advisor. Note that the Carey Business School and the School of Education
students have priority in registering for these schools’ courses.
School
of Medicine and Bloomberg School of Public Health
Except for Public Health Studies majors taking course at the School of
Public Health who require only the faculty advisor’s approval signature,
undergraduates may register for courses in these schools with the approval
of the faculty advisor, the course instructor, and the student’s
academic advising office. Students must have an adequate background for
the courses, and courses must be taken for a grade.
Registering for Courses
at Other JHU Divisions During the Summer
Degree-seeking students are permitted to enroll in other JHU divisions
through the interdivisional registration process during the summer terms.
Students should register and pay for the course at their home division.
The course, along with credits and grade, will appear of the student’s
home division transcript. Approval is required from both the home and
host divisions to ensure that the interdivisional enrollment is appropriate
for the student’s degree.
Registering for Courses at Cooperative Schools
Undergraduates may take one course per semester at one of the several
area colleges and universities that comprise the academic cooperative
program. The cooperative program includes the following colleges in the
Baltimore area: Coppin State University, Goucher College, Loyola College,
Morgan State University, College of Notre Dame, Towson University, the
University of Maryland, Baltimore County, and Villa Julie College. Similar
arrangements on a limited basis are in place with the Maryland Institute
College of Art and the Baltimore Hebrew College.
Students who have received Air Force ROTC scholarships will register
for the required ROTC courses at the University of Maryland, College
Park using the cooperative institution registration process described
in this section.
Courses that are equivalent to those offered at the Homewood
campus may not be taken through the cooperative program. Students register
in person with the Homewood Registrar. Students must submit a registration
or add/drop form along with a supplemental registration form for cooperative
program courses. The form is available from the Registrar’s Office, 75
Garland or from the student’s academic advising office. The faculty
advisor’s approval signature is required for all cooperative school
courses. An academic advisor from the Student’s Advising Office
must also sign the form. Submit completed registration materials to the
Homewood Registrar’s Office.
Immediately before classes begin at the host school,
visiting students should report to the host school’s registrar.
Visiting students are not required to complete registration forms at
the host school, and no academic record is established at the host institution.
There is no additional fee or tuition charge for courses taken through
the cooperative education program, except when the host school charges
a laboratory or materials fee. In that event, the student pays the fee
directly to the host institution.
Courses at cooperative schools must be taken for letter
grades. Both grades and credits appear on the Hopkins academic record
along with an indication of where the courses were taken. The grades
are included in calculations of the grade point average. |