Emergency Grading Accommodation Policy

A Message from Dr. Paul Gemperline, Dean of ECU Graduate School

There have been a lot of questions about the Emergency Grading Accommodation policy as it applies to graduate students. The purpose of my message today is to provide a clear rationale for why this is important, some background information, and clarification on its implementation.

These are extraordinary times, and as a Pirate Nation, our students’ health, well-being, and success are of paramount importance. Many of our graduate students are experiencing disruptive challenges in this crisis, such as loss of employment and income, the need to provide at-home care for children, persons with special needs or elderly relatives. Some of our students will need flexibility to cope with these challenges.  The only students who do not have the pass/fail option are MD, DMD and Nursing students.

Rationale

This policy effectively gives immunity from academic probation or dismissal to graduate students who earn grades of “C” or “F” in the spring 2020 semester.

  1. Students currently on academic probation will not be re-evaluated for return to satisfactory academic progress until the end of the Summer 2020 semester or their next term of enrollment.
  2. Students who earn sufficiently high grades to return to good academic standing may request to be evaluated immediately.
  3. Students will still be obligated to repeat courses where work does not meet the standards for completion of their degree, especially in programs with specialty accreditation.
  4. We know there is movement nationally among many specialized accrediting bodies to make accommodations during this crisis.
  5. Our policy is aligned with the vast majority of graduate schools throughout the country on this. We are in good company, and that is a good thing.

Implementation Notes

  1. Please see the following link for details. https://news.ecu.edu/2020/03/23/emergency-grading-accommodation-for-spring-2020/
  2. It will be the student’s choice to elect to receive a pass/fail grade or not. Students will be able to see their letter grades first. The deadline for selecting the pass/fail option is June 30, 2020.
  3. Students will be able to self-select on a course-by-course basis.
  4. The student selection can only be made one time.
  5. The means of designating a pass/fail grade on transcripts is under development in the Registrar’s office. To a avoid confusion, something other than a grade of “F” will be used.
  6. Grades of “pass” and “fail” will not factor into a student’s GPA.
  7. The Graduate Catalog indicates a grade of “C” is a passing grade. Students with a grade of “C” will be assigned a grade of “pass” by the registrar if they elect the pass/fail policy.
  8. Generally, it will in the students’ best interests to retain grades of “A” or “B” and not elect to convert them to “pass”.
  9. For programs that require grades of “B” or higher to progress in their program, for example, clinical programs, students should be carefully advised by their faculty about the consequence of selecting a pass/fail option.
  10. Students who elect to receive a grade of “pass” in circumstances where they do not meet documented minimum performance standards should be required to repeat the work. Students in this situation might have to restart with a spring 2021 cohort.
  11. Students who earn a grade of “fail” will be required to repeat the course if it is required to meet degree requirements. If it is an elective course, it may be repeated, or an alternative elective may be selected.

For Students Using VA Benefits:

If you opt to change your course grading to a pass/fail for the semester, the VA will still pay as normal.  There will be no changes to your VA certification due to the pass/fail grading option.

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