|
SPRING CALENDAR 2008
PDF Version

| Graduation planning
sheet due dates are as follows: |
|
Summer 2008 February
01, 2008 |
|
Fall 2008
February 01, 2008 |
| |
| Please
refer to the Student Financial Services website at
www.colostate-pueblo.edu/sfs for tuition
information, payment deadlines, scholarship information,
or Financial Aid information. |
| |
| October 22 |
Early
Advisement and Registration for Spring 2008 begins for
continuing students BY APPOINTMENT ONLY. See
Registration Information |
| |
| January 10 |
New first-year
student orientation and advisement/registration |
| |
| January 11 |
OPEN REGISTRATION
(8 a.m. – 5 p.m.) |
| |
| January 11 |
Last day to petition for
residency classification |
| |
| January 14 |
Classes begin |
|
| January 18 |
End of add
period (Courses added after this date must be approved
by instructor.) |
| |
| January 28 |
End of drop
period (Last day to drop course without a grade
recorded.) |
| |
| January 29 |
Late add period
begins for full-term courses. Instructor approval and
payment of a $10.00 Late Add Fee is now required. |
| |
| January 29 |
Students may
TOTALLY WITHDRAW from CSU-Pueblo on or after this date
and are responsible for pro-rated charges plus a
non-refundable processing fee; grades of (W) will be
recorded. |
| |
| February 1 |
Deadline for
Summer 2008 or Fall 2008 Planning Sheets to be submitted
to Records by 5 p.m. on this date. |
| |
| March 14 |
Last day for
withdrawing from individual courses with a grade of
(W) recorded. Course withdrawals must
be processed in the Records Office by 5 p.m.
on this date. |
| |
| March 24
- 28 |
Spring
break |
| |
| April 25 |
Last day to
withdraw totally from the University |
|
| April 25 |
Classes end |
| |
| April 28
- May 2 |
Final exams |
| |
| May 3 |
Commencement |
| |
PROCEDURES AND DEADLINES SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT
NOTICE
Colorado State University-Pueblo is an equal
opportunity/affirmative action institution and complies
with all Federal and Colorado State laws, regulations,
and executive orders regarding affirmative action
requirements in all programs. The Office of Affirmative
Action is located in the Occhiato University Center, Room
045, to assist CSU-Pueblo staff in meeting its
affirmative action responsibilities. Ethnic minorities,
women and other protected class members are encouraged
to apply and to so identify themselves. Inquiries can be
made by phone at (719)-549-2092 or by stopping by the
office.
|
FINALS EXAM SCHEDULE - SPRING 2008 
The following procedures apply to all courses during the final
week of the semester:
- This final examination week is part of the regular semester
and students should be in attendance even when final
examinations are not given. The final examination may be
eliminated by an instructor consistent with department
procedure. Classes are normally held even though examinations
may not be given.
- Courses for less than four credits shall meet for one
period; courses for four or more credits may meet for two
periods.
- Classes shall meet only at the time indicated on the
examination schedule.
- Any approved exception of regulations 1, 2, and 3 above
(e.g., special types of examinations, which need time or special
type of examinations) shall be announced the second week of
class and communicated in writing to the appropriate dean.
Inside the boxes on the schedule below, find the regular meeting
time of the class and from that box read upward and left to
determine the time and day of exam. For example, 8:00 MWF
classes are scheduled to administer final exams from 8:00 -
10:20 Monday, April 28. Classes will meet for the final exam
period in regularly assigned classrooms. Classes meeting at or
after 5 p.m. must test at their regularly
scheduled time.
TIME OF
FINAL EXAM |
APRIL 28 MON |
APRIL 29
TUE |
APRIL 30 WED |
MAY 1 THUR |
MAY 2 FRI |
|
8:00 - 10:20 |
8:00 MWF
8:30 MWF |
8:00 TTH
8:30 TTH |
9:00 MWF
9:30 MWF |
9:00 TTH
9:30 TTH
|
10:00 MWF
10:30 MWF |
|
10:30 - 12:50 |
10:00 TTH
10:30 TTH |
11:00 MWF
11:30 MWF |
11:00 TTH
11:30 TTH |
12:00 MWF
12:30 MWF |
12:00 TTH
12:30 TTH |
|
1:00 - 3:20 |
1:00 MWF
1:30 MWF |
1:00 TTH
1:30 TTH |
2:00 MWF
2:30 MWF |
2:00 TTH
2:30 TTH |
3:00 MWF
3:30 MWF |
|
3:30 - 5:30 |
3:00 TTH
3:30 TTH |
4:00 MWF
4:30 MWF |
4:00 TTH
4:30 TTH |
|
|
SCHEDULE CHANGES AND WITHDRAWALS
Spring 2008 Schedule Changes during Add/Drop Period
Students may add classes during the first five class days (January 14 – January 18). After the first five class days, all additions must be approved by the instructor of the class.
Students may drop classes (without a grade recorded) during the first eleven class days of the semester (January 14 – January 28).
Short-term courses may be dropped before 15 percent of the course duration has passed without a record of the dropped course appearing on a student’s permanent record.
Spring 2008 Course Withdrawal after the Drop Period
Immediately following the end of the drop/add period, students
may withdraw from a course according to the policies below.
INDIVIDUAL COURSE WITHDRAWALS ARE PROCESSED IN THE
RECORDS OFFICE (AD 202).
Last date for grade of (W)
| Full-term course |
March 14 by 5 p.m. |
| Short-term course |
Before 60 percent of the course duration has passed |
When a student withdraws from a course before 60 percent of the
course duration has passed, a grade of “W”
(withdrawal) will be recorded on the academic record. After 60
percent of the course duration has passed, a student
may not withdraw. Tuition
and fees will not be adjusted for individual course withdrawals
during this withdrawal period. Course withdrawals
must be processed in the Records Office. Please
refer to the following table:
| LENGTH |
END |
LAST |
| OF |
OF |
DATE |
| CLASS |
DROP |
(W) |
| |
PERIOD |
|
| (Weeks) |
(Days) |
(Weeks) |
| 15 |
11 |
9 |
| 14 |
11 |
8 |
| 13 |
10 |
8 |
| 12 |
9 |
7 |
| 11 |
8 |
7 |
| 10 |
8 |
6 |
| 9 |
7 |
5 |
| 8 |
6 |
5 |
| 7 |
5 |
4 |
| 6 |
5 |
4 |
| 5 |
4 |
3 |
| 4 |
3 |
2 |
| 3 |
2 |
2 |
| 2 |
2 |
1 |
| 1 |
1 |
0.6 |
Once students have registered for a course, they are
considered enrolled in that course until they have officially
withdrawn from the course in the Records Office. Simply
not attending class will not
automatically terminate the student's enrollment in the course.
A student who ceased attendance without first officially
withdrawing from the course will receive a failing grade and
will be charged full tuition and fees.
Total Withdrawal from the University To
withdraw totally from the University, a student
must obtain the appropriate withdrawal form from Student
Academic Services (SAS), Psychology Building, Room 232, secure
the appropriate approval signatures, and return the completed
form immediately to the Records Office for processing. Total
withdrawals will not be processed after the last scheduled class
day of the semester, this excludes finals week.
REGISTRATION INFORMATION
Continuing Students (Currently-enrolled) will
be given the opportunity to be advised and register for Spring
2008 classes beginning Monday, October 22. Students will be
assigned a registration day according to their classification
and may register anytime on or after their assigned day as
follows:
| Grad, Degree Plus and Seniors |
Monday |
October 22, 2007 |
| Juniors |
Tuesday |
October 23, 2007 |
| Sophomores |
Wednesday |
October 24, 2007 |
| Freshmen |
Thursday |
October 25, 2007 |
|
First-year Freshmen who have been accepted into
the University can contact their first-year advisor at any time to
create a class schedule. New student Orientation is also required of
first-year students. Advisor information and
orientation/registration information can be located at
http://www.colostate-pueblo.edu/fyp/orientation/. If the student
wishes to speak with someone in person, the First-Year Programs
department can be contacted at (719) 549-2584.
New Transfer Students (13 or more transferable collegiate
credit hours) upon acceptance to CSU-Pueblo will receive
academic advising/registration information.
Readmitted students who are eligible for
readmission will be allowed to register during an early registration
period. Readmitted students will receive a registration permit in
the mail.
Walk-in (Guest) and Continuing Students (Regular “Open”
Registration): Students without registration appointments
or students who have not registered previously for Spring 2008 may
register during Open Registration.
Spring Open Registration
Friday, January 11, from 8 a.m. – 5 p.m. Applications will be processed in the Admissions Office (AD 202). Academic advisement and registration will take place in the academic departments. Advising/registration for all first-time freshmen will be handled by First-Year Programs (LIB 240) and all undeclared students will be handled by Student Academic Services (PSY 232).
FINANCIAL INFORMATION
For details on the following information, please visit
www.colostate-pueblo.edu/sfs.
Financial Aid
Students who would like to be awarded financial aid to pay for
college MUST complete applications to assist the University in
determining what types of financial aid each student may receive. At
CSU-Pueblo, the financial aid priority funding deadline is March 1,
every year. Some types of financial aid are awarded on a first come
first served basis. Completing your Free Application for Federal
Student Aid (FAFSA) and the University Scholarship Application prior
to March 1 each year guarantees that you will be considered for all
available funding. Both applications are available on the web at
http://www.colostate-pueblo.edu/sfs, and can be completed from
the comfort of your own home. This also helps to ensure that your
educational expenses will be paid in a timely manner.
Billing Information
University Policies
Veteran’s Education Benefits
ACCESS STUDENT ACCOUNTS ON-LINE
- Log onto
www.colostate-pueblo.edu.
- Click Current Students TWOLF Portal.
- Under Login to Web Apps, select
Student Billing/Account Activity
- For detailed information about how financial aid was applied to your
account, select
Financial Aid Payments.
For additional information contact:
Student Financial Services
Administration Building, Room 212
(719) 549-2753
sfs@colostate-pueblo.edu
Office Hours: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday thru Friday
GENERAL EDUCATION REQUIREMENTS
Note: Courses listed below that are marked with an
asterisk (*) are not in the statewide common core,
meaning that they are not guaranteed in transfer
to any other college or university in Colorado.
The general education requirement for graduation
includes a total of 35 semester credits in two categories:
| Skills Component |
9 credits |
| Knowledge Component |
26 credits |
| |
|
| TOTAL |
35 credits |
I.
SKILLS COMPONENT
To complete the Skills component, students must
successfully complete courses in the following content areas with a
minimum overall GPA of 2.000:
| Written Communication |
(2 courses) |
6 credits |
| Quantitative Reasoning |
(1 course)
| 3 credits |
| |
|
| TOTAL |
|
9 credits |
A. Written
Communication
Take each of the following courses:
| ENG 101 |
English Composition I |
3 credits |
| ENG 102 |
English Composition II |
3 credits |
B. Quantitative Reasoning
Take one of the following courses:
| MATH 109 |
Mathematical Explorations |
3 credits |
| MATH 121 |
College Algebra |
4 credits |
| MATH 124 |
Pre-Calculus Math |
5 credits |
| MATH 126 |
Calculus and Analytic Geometry I |
5 credits |
| MATH 156 |
Introduction to Statistics |
3 credits |
| MATH 221 |
Applied Calculus: An Intuitive Approach |
4 credits
|
or any MATH course that includes one of these as a prerequisite.
II. KNOWLEDGE COMPONENT
To complete the Knowledge component, students must
successfully complete courses in the following content areas:
| Humanities |
(3 courses) |
9 credits |
| History |
(1 course) |
3 credits |
| Social Sciences |
(2 courses) |
6 credits
|
| Natural and Physical Sciences |
(2 courses with labs) |
8 credits |
| |
|
|
| TOTAL |
|
26 credits |
Students must take one course that is designated as
cross-cultural. Courses taken to meet the Knowledge requirement may
be used to meet the cross-cultural requirement if they have a
(CC)
next to their listing.
Your major may recommend certain courses from the list of
courses below. Refer to your major’s catalog description for
more information.
Note: Courses listed below that are marked with an
asterisk (*) are not in the statewide common core,
meaning that they are not guaranteed in transfer to
any other college or university in Colorado.
| A.
Humanities |
| ART |
100 |
Visual Dynamics (CC) |
| ART |
211 |
History of Art I (CC) |
| ART |
212 |
History of Art II (CC) |
| ENG |
130 |
Introduction to Literature |
| ENG/CS |
220 |
Survey of Chicano
Literature (CC) |
| ENG |
221 |
Masterpieces of Literature
I |
| ENG |
222 |
Masterpieces of Literature
II
|
| ENG |
240 |
Survey of Ethnic Literature
(CC) |
| FL |
100* |
Introduction to Comparative
Linguistics (CC) |
| Foreign Language (FRN, GER,
ITL, RUS, SPN) |
|
Courses: 101*, 102*, 201* or 202* (CC)
|
| MUS |
118 |
Music Appreciation (CC) |
| PHIL |
102 |
Philosophical Literature |
| PHIL |
120 |
Non-Western World Religions
(CC) |
| PHIL |
201 |
Classics in Ethics |
| PHIL |
204 |
Critical
Reasoning
|
| PHIL |
205 |
Deductive Logic |
| SPCOM |
103* |
Speaking and Listening |
| SPN |
130 |
Cultures of the
Spanish-Speaking World (CC) |
| |
| B.
History |
| HIST |
101 |
World Civilization to 1100
(CC) |
| HIST |
102 |
World Civilization from
1100 to 1800 (CC) |
| HIST |
103 |
World Civilization since
1800 (CC) |
| HIST/CS |
136 |
Southwest United States
(CC) |
| HIST |
201 |
US History I |
| HIST |
202 |
US History II |
| |
| C.
Social Sciences |
| ANTHR |
100 |
Cultural Anthropology
(CC)
|
| ANTHR/ENG |
106* |
Language, Thought and
Culture (CC) |
| CS |
101 |
Introduction to Chicano
Studies (CC) |
| ECON |
201 |
Principles of
Macroeconomics |
| ECON |
202 |
Principles of
Microeconomics |
| GEOG |
103* |
World Regional Geography
(CC) |
| MCCNM |
101* |
Media and Society |
| POLSC |
101 |
American National Politics |
| POLSC |
200 |
Understanding Human
Conflict (CC) |
| PSYCH |
100 |
General Psychology |
| PSYCH |
151 |
Human Development |
| PSYCH |
222 |
Understanding Animal
Behavior |
| PSYCH/SOC/WS |
231*
|
Marriage, Family and
Relationships |
| SOC |
101 |
Introduction to Sociology |
| SOC |
201 |
Social Problems |
| |
| D.
Natural and Physical Sciences |
| BIOL |
100/L |
Principles of Biology with
Lab |
| BIOL |
121/L |
Environmental Conservation
with Lab |
| BIOL |
191/L* |
College Biology I/Botany
with Lab |
| BIOL |
192/L |
College Biology II/Zoology
with Lab |
| BIOL |
223/L |
Human Physiology and
Anatomy I with Lab |
| BIOL |
224/L |
Human Physiology and
Anatomy II with Lab |
| CHEM |
101/L |
Chemistry and Society with
Lab |
| CHEM |
111/L |
Principles of Chemistry
with Lab |
| CHEM |
121/L |
General Chemistry I with
Lab |
| CHEM |
122/L |
General Chemistry II with
Lab |
| CHEM |
160/L |
Introduction to Forensic
Science with Lab |
| EXHP |
162/L* |
Personal Health with Lab
|
| GEOL |
101/L |
Earth Science with Lab |
| MET |
105* |
It’s a Material World
(includes Lab)
|
| PHYS |
110/L |
Astronomy with Lab |
| PHYS |
140/L |
Light, Energy and the Atom
with Lab |
| PHYS |
201/L |
Principles of Physics I
with Lab |
| PHYS |
202/L |
Principles of Physics II
with Lab |
| PHYS |
221/L |
General Physics I with Lab |
| PHYS |
222/L |
General Physics II with Lab |
DIRECTORY OF ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICES
| OFFICE |
ROOM |
TELEPHONE |
| Accounting Services |
AD 204 |
549-2753 |
| Admissions Office |
AD 202 |
549-2461 |
| Affirmative Action |
OC 045 |
549-2092 |
| Associated Students’ Government |
OC 244 |
549-2866 |
| Athletics |
AD 309 |
549-2711 |
| Bookstore |
OC 101 |
549-2146 |
| Career Center |
OC 103 |
549-2980 |
| Cashier's Office |
AD 2nd floor |
549-2131 |
| Child Care Center |
DC |
549-2407 |
| Continuing Education |
UV Bldg. 4060, Suite 606 |
549-2316 |
| External Affairs |
AD 320 |
549-2810 |
| Finance and Budget Office |
AD 209 |
549-2314 |
| First-Year Programs |
LIB 240 |
549-2584 |
| Orientation |
LIB 240 |
549-2584 |
| Graduate Admissions |
AD 201 |
549-2461 |
| Health Services |
OC (back courtyard) |
549-2830 |
| Housing |
RH Lobby |
549-2601 |
| Institutional Research & Analysis |
AD 301 |
549-2110 |
| International Student Services |
OC Underground Annex |
549-2329 |
| Library |
LIB 1st floor |
549-2386 |
| Physical Plant, Director |
PP 109 |
549-2211 |
| President's Office |
AD 301 |
549-2306 |
| Provost’s Office |
AD 303 |
549-2313 |
| Registration (Records Office) |
AD 202 |
549-2261 |
| Scholarships |
AD 212 |
549-2967 |
| Student Academic Services |
P 232 |
549-2581 |
| Academic Undeclared Advising |
P 232 |
549-2581 |
| Disability
Resource Office |
P 232 |
549-2663 |
| National
Test-Site Services |
P 232 |
549-2172 |
| Writing Room |
P 232 |
549-2901 |
| Student Employment |
AD 212 |
549-2753 |
| Student Financial Services |
AD 212 |
549-2753 |
| Student Life and Development |
OC 116 |
549-2586 |
| Veteran's Affairs |
AD 202 |
549-2910 |
|
| COLLEGE/SCHOOL DEANS |
| Education,
Engineering, and Professional Studies |
Dr. Hector Carrasco,
Dean |
T 250 |
549-2696 |
|
Humanities and Social Sciences |
Dr. Roy
Sonnema, Interim Dean |
AM 119 |
549-2865 |
| School of Business |
Dr. Michael
Fronmueller, Dean |
HSB 233 |
549-2142 |
| Science
and Mathematics |
Dr.
Janna McLean, Interim Dean |
LS 106 |
549-2340 |
|
|
| BUILDING DESIGNATIONS |
| AD/ADM |
Administration building |
| AM |
Art/Music building |
| CHEM |
Chemistry building |
| DC |
Child Care Center |
| HPER |
Massari Arena |
| HSB |
Hasan School of Business
building |
| LIB |
Library building |
| LS |
Life Science building |
| LW |
Library Wing |
| M/C |
Music classroom in Art/Music
building |
| OC/OUC |
Occhiato Center |
| PM |
Physics/Mathematics building |
| P/PSY |
Psychology building |
| PP |
Physical Plant Maintenance
Facility |
| RC |
Ropes Course |
| RH/BRHA |
Residence Hall |
| SC |
Sam Jones Sports
Center |
| T |
Technology building |
| UV |
University Village at Walking
Stick |
|
| OTHER LOCATIONS |
| HO |
Hospital (St.
Mary-Corwin, Parkview or Colo. Mental Health) |
| BCC |
Buell Communications
Center |
PCC
|
Pueblo Community
College
|
| |
|
| COLORADO SPRINGS |
| CITC |
Citadel Center |
| FTCR |
Fort Carson |
PAFB
|
Peterson Air Force
Base
|
| |
|
|
|