Enrollment Information
Standard Semesters
A standard semester is 15-to-19 weeks in length
with courses beginning the first week and ending the last week.
Daytime Undergraduate
- 12 or more credits is full-time
- 9-11 credits is 3/4-time
- 6-8 credits is 1/2-time
- 4-5 credits is less than 1/2-time
- 1-3 credits is 1/4-time or less
Professional Studies Program
Professional Studies Programs don't follow a
standard semester format. BA Psychology and BA Business
Administration are the programs offered through the
Professional Studies Program.
Non-standard semester training time isn't measured like standard
semester training time. VA converts undergraduate, non-standard
credit to credit equivalents. VA makes the conversion, not
Northwest Christian University. The conversion formula is: Credit x
18 / weeks = credit equivalents. The number of weeks is the number
of days in the course divided by seven, rounding down a remainder
of three days or less and rounding up a remainder of four days or
more.
Using the conversion formula, a three-credit course is full-time
if four weeks (13 credit equivalents, discard fractions), 3/4-time
if five weeks (10 credit equivalents), 3/4-time if six weeks (i
credit equivalents), and 1/2-time if seven weeks (7 credit
equivalents).
Graduate Programs
Graduate programs don't follow a standard semester
format. Graduate programs include M.Ed Masters of Education,
MBA Masters of Business Administration, MA Community Counseling,
and MA School Counseling. Courses are taken sequentially, and the
programs usually are completed within five to seven semesters,
depending on the program.
Course Applicability
Only credits that apply toward completion of the
student's degree can be certified for VA purposes. If 12 credits
are certified, all 12 must apply. If a student enrolls in 12
credits, but only nine satisfy a degree requirement, then the
student is certified for nine credits.
There are two exceptions to the rule about course
appliciability:
- The last semester before graduation, all credit taken can be
certified if one or more of the credits satisfy a graduation
requirement.
- If the university allows substitutions for program
requirements, we will allow course substitutions if they are
approved by the university and documented in the student's
file.
Repeating Courses
Courses that are failed or for which the grade does
not meet the minimum requirements for graduation may be certified
for VA purposes if they are repeated. Courses that are successfully
completed may not be certified for VA purposes if they are
repeated. If students must take additional courses in order to
raise their GPA to graduate, the courses must be courses that have
not already been successfully completed by the student.
Advance Payment
Advance Pay may be paid if:
- The
student requests advance pay, and
- There is more than 30 days between terms and interval pay won't
be paid, and
- The student is enrolled at least half-time.
Advance pay requests should be submitted 30-to-120 days before
the begin date. The check will be sent to the school, payable to
the student. A separate Certification of Delivery (VA Form
22-1999V) will be sent to the school. Schools must handle advance
pay checks securely and give the advance pay check to the student
when he or she registers (or not more than 30 days before the
beginning of school if registration is earlier).
An advance will pay the first and second month. The first month
may be a partial month, with payment pro rated for the number of
days attended that month. Advance pay for a student enrolled
9/28/08 through 6/1/09 would pay 9/28/08 through 10/31/08. Since VA
normally pays after a month is completed, the student wouldn't
receive another check until December, when payment for November is
made.
Supplemental and Concurrent Enrollment
A student may take courses at more than one school
that apply to his or her degree. The school that will grant the
degree is the student's "parent" school. All other schools are
"secondary" schools.
VA can pay benefits for courses taken at secondary schools. If
the student is enrolled at the secondary school, VA will pay for
the credit taken at the secondary. If the student is enrolled at
the parent and the secondary school at the same time
("concurrent"), VA will pay for the combined credit, taking
overlapping enrollment dates into account.