Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:See if their advisor had to sign the drop form. If they did, you might say they should have pointed this out to a freshman.
But if only the course professor had to sign the form, they would not have the bigger picture (in terms of the full course load).
Signed, a professor
I was going to inquire along these lines - not to throw blame, but was wondering if a college student needs to meet with their advisor before dropping a class. Would seem to make sense for these types of reasons- so the advisor can advise on the impacts of the decision rhat a new student might not be thinking about.
Which schools do that kind of hand holding?
You can call it hand holding; we'll just call it the advisor's job.
In college? Sounds like a HS for older kids. Good lord.
Anonymous wrote:OP for my kid at UMD the requirement was 24 credits per year. You could go below 12 credits one semester but had to make up the credits somewhere else - in his case, he took a 3 credit course over Winter Term.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Professor here. Not sure the advisor would be involved but our dean’s office, the last approval in a late drop, would have caught it.
That sucks.
PP, what does that mean exactly? I am not sure what "caught it" means. Do you mean before course is dropped or after? And if before, what do they do with that information? Prevent the student from dropping it?
Dean of Undergraduate studies/Student affairs and/or their advisors should sign off and catch this - and confirm with student they have dropped below FT threshold. Also to the "UMD doesn't" response
https://academiccatalog.umd.edu/undergraduate/registration-academic-requirements-regulations/academic-advising/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Professor here. Not sure the advisor would be involved but our dean’s office, the last approval in a late drop, would have caught it.
That sucks.
PP, what does that mean exactly? I am not sure what "caught it" means. Do you mean before course is dropped or after? And if before, what do they do with that information? Prevent the student from dropping it?
Anonymous wrote:Professor here. Not sure the advisor would be involved but our dean’s office, the last approval in a late drop, would have caught it.
That sucks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:See if their advisor had to sign the drop form. If they did, you might say they should have pointed this out to a freshman.
But if only the course professor had to sign the form, they would not have the bigger picture (in terms of the full course load).
Signed, a professor
I was going to inquire along these lines - not to throw blame, but was wondering if a college student needs to meet with their advisor before dropping a class. Would seem to make sense for these types of reasons- so the advisor can advise on the impacts of the decision rhat a new student might not be thinking about.
Which schools do that kind of hand holding?
Most Flagship state schools do for starters.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:See if their advisor had to sign the drop form. If they did, you might say they should have pointed this out to a freshman.
But if only the course professor had to sign the form, they would not have the bigger picture (in terms of the full course load).
Signed, a professor
I was going to inquire along these lines - not to throw blame, but was wondering if a college student needs to meet with their advisor before dropping a class. Would seem to make sense for these types of reasons- so the advisor can advise on the impacts of the decision rhat a new student might not be thinking about.
Which schools do that kind of hand holding?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:See if their advisor had to sign the drop form. If they did, you might say they should have pointed this out to a freshman.
But if only the course professor had to sign the form, they would not have the bigger picture (in terms of the full course load).
Signed, a professor
I was going to inquire along these lines - not to throw blame, but was wondering if a college student needs to meet with their advisor before dropping a class. Would seem to make sense for these types of reasons- so the advisor can advise on the impacts of the decision rhat a new student might not be thinking about.
Which schools do that kind of hand holding?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:See if their advisor had to sign the drop form. If they did, you might say they should have pointed this out to a freshman.
But if only the course professor had to sign the form, they would not have the bigger picture (in terms of the full course load).
Signed, a professor
I was going to inquire along these lines - not to throw blame, but was wondering if a college student needs to meet with their advisor before dropping a class. Would seem to make sense for these types of reasons- so the advisor can advise on the impacts of the decision rhat a new student might not be thinking about.
Which schools do that kind of hand holding?
You can call it hand holding; we'll just call it the advisor's job.