Registration
Students register for classes on those days designated on the College calendar. No registrations are accepted after the first week of a semester. Students register for the fall semester in April. Spring semester registration takes place in November.
A student may register either as a degree or a non-degree student and as a full-time or part-time student. Regular students are degree candidates, and they must be in an approved major.
Many courses have prerequisites, and students are reminded of their responsibility for meeting all prerequisites and for taking courses in proper sequence.
To register for the next semester, a student must have met all financial obligations. Students who do not register during the registration period cannot be guaranteed space in the residence halls or classes. Students must meet with their advisor prior to registration, and the advisor must remove the “advising hold” before students can register online through ECWeb.
Registration Holds
A student’s registration may be delayed as a result of unpaid account balances, incomplete academic records, disciplinary sanctions,failure to meet with the advisor, failure to provide current off-campus address information, or incomplete health records. For full-time students, the health record must include a Health Services Physical Form and evidence that all required immunizations have been received.
Schedule Changes
Students who have registered may make changes to their schedule via the College Web system on a space-available basis.
Adding Courses
Students may add courses to their schedule during the first week of a semester by accessing their academic schedule via the College Web system. Course additions must be completed by 5 p.m. on the fifth class day of the semester.
Dropping Courses
Courses dropped from a student’s schedule during the first four weeks of a semester do not appear on the student’s academic record. Drop request forms are available in the Office of Registration and Records. The completed form must be signed by the academic advisor and returned to the Office of Registration and Records. A student is not dropped or withdrawn from a class simply by discontinuing attendance or by notifying the professor. The completion of any registration change is the responsibility of the student, not the faculty member. Seniors should keep in mind that dropping or withdrawing from a course could jeopardize their graduation clearance.
Withdrawal from Classes
Students withdraw from classes through the Office of Registration and Records. The course will not appear on the permanent record if the student withdraws (i.e., drops) on or before the end of the fourth week of the semester. From this time to the end of the 11th week, a withdrawal will result in a grade of W. All withdrawals after the end of the11th week of the semester receive a grade of WF unless the withdrawal is from College and is for medical reasons, in which case a W is recorded for each course. A student may not withdraw from individual courses for medical reasons. A grade of WF is calculated into the student’s average as though it were an F.
Repeating Courses
Courses that are eligible to be repeated must be taken at Elizabethtown College and not at another institution as a transfer course. The most recent grade is final and is used in the calculation of semester and cumulative grade point averages. A course must be repeated in the same manner in which it was originally enrolled (i.e., a course normally cannot be repeated as a Directed Study unless it was originally registered as a Directed Study).
Students may repeat any course in which they earned an F or NP. Under certain conditions, students may be able to repeat a course in which they earned a C- or a grade in the D range. To do so, the following conditions must be met:
The student must have the approval of their advisor and the major/minor Department Chair.
The student must file a repeat registration card in the Office of Registration and Records. Failure to do so will result in a duplication of credits carried, a possible delay in graduation, and a decrease in the cumulative grade point average.
Auditing Courses
Students in good academic standing (2.00 or better) mayelect to audit courses provided they do not preempt regularly enrolled studentsand they have the permission of the professor teaching the course.
The requirements for the audit are determined by the professor. Upon completion of all such requirements, the audit is posted on the student’s permanent record card. Audit courses carry neither academic credit nor grade.
Audit credits are included in the total credits to determine full-time status and overload charges. A fee is charged on aper-credit basis for part-time students who wish to audit courses. Auditors – both full-time and part-time – also must pay any additional fees for labs, studio supplies and other direct costs. Students may add a course for audit or change a course registration from audit to credit during the first week of class only. Change of course registration from credit to audit cannot be made after completion of the fourth week of the semester. Once a course has been audited, it may not be taken for credit. Likewise, a course that has been completed for credit may not be repeated and recorded as an audit course.
Class Absences
Class Attendance
Class attendance policy is determined individually by faculty members. It is the position of the College that the above-average student should be given some freedom of judgment as to attendance needs, while the average student must, of necessity, be encouraged or required to maintain a record of regular attendance.
Each faculty member announces his or her attendance policy at the start of each semester. A professor or the College may dismiss a student from a course for excessive absences. Such a dismissal in the first through fourth weeks of the semester results in removal of the course from the student’s record; after the fourth week, a grade of WF is recorded for the course. A student may appeal to the Academic Standing Committee for reinstatement to the course.
Students are responsible for consulting with the professor in the case of absences due to illness or other personal problems.
Long-Term Absences
A long-term absence from classes or from campus may result in mandatory withdrawal from the College. After 15 consecutive class days of absence from all classes, a student is considered to have withdrawn from the College.Students absent for verified medical reasons will be granted a Medical Withdrawal (see subsequent section within this chapter).





















