[email protected] or Coalition Application....

29
Admission 1 ADMISSION General Application Information Application Information Both Texas resident and non-resident students can apply for undergraduate admission to any Texas Public University for freshman, transfer and international admission by using the ApplyTexas Application or Coalition Application. You may access the appropriate application from the ApplyTexas Application website (www.applytexas.org), the Coalition Application website (http://www.coalitionforcollegeaccess.org/) or the Texas A&M University website (http://admissions.tamu.edu). Texas A&M University has several conveniently located Prospective Student Centers throughout the state, staffed with regional advisors ready to serve you. Please contact the center nearest you to learn more about admissions, financial aid, academic programs and student services. Visit the website admissions.tamu.edu/psc for more details. Aggieland Prospective Student Center 1 Texas A&M University 109 John J. Koldus Building 1265 TAMU College Station, TX 77843-1265 (979) 458-0950 Corpus Christi Regional Prospective Student Center 1 5350 South Staples, Suite 405 Corpus Christi, TX 78411 (361) 289-7905 Dallas/Fort Worth Regional Prospective Student Center 1 3900 Arlington Highlands Blvd., Suite 273 Arlington, TX 76018 (817) 375-0960 Houston Regional Prospective Student Center 1 1225 North Loop West, Suite 200 Houston, TX 77008 (713) 454-1990 Laredo Regional Prospective Student Center 1 6401 Arena Road, Suite 5A Laredo, TX 78041 (956) 795-0412 Rio Grande Valley Regional Prospective Student Center 1 5277 North 23rd St. McAllen, TX 78504 (956) 683-8647 San Antonio Regional Prospective Student Centers 1 40 NE Loop 410, Suite 605 San Antonio, TX 78216 (210) 212-7016 Office of Admissions 1 217 John J. Koldus Building Texas A&M University 1265 TAMU College Station, TX 77843-1265 (979) 845-1060 [email protected] http://admissions.tamu.edu 1 Se habla español. The admission guidelines presented here are for admission to the Spring, Summer or Fall 2019 semester. While they are the best guide available, admission criteria are subject to change. The Office of Admissions website (http://admissions.tamu.edu) contains the admission policies and procedures in effect for 2019 admission. Types of Admission and Application Calendars At the Time of Application Term Opening Date Closing Date Freshman An applicant who: • is a citizen or permanent resident of the United States or qualifies for Texas residency based on Senate Bill 1528 • is a degree- seeking applicant and is without college credit 1 or • is still in high school, with or without college credit Spring 2019 Fall 2019 Jul. 1, 2018 Jul. 1, 2018 Oct. 15, 2018 Dec. 1, 2018 Transfer

Transcript of [email protected] or Coalition Application....

Page 1: admissions@tamu.edu or Coalition Application. …catalog.tamu.edu/undergraduate/general-information/...Texas A&M University 109 John J. Koldus Building 1265 TAMU College Station, TX

Admission           1

ADMISSIONGeneral Application Information

Application InformationBoth Texas resident and non-resident students can apply forundergraduate admission to any Texas Public University for freshman,transfer and international admission by using the ApplyTexas Applicationor Coalition Application.

You may access the appropriate application from the ApplyTexasApplication website (www.applytexas.org), the Coalition Applicationwebsite (http://www.coalitionforcollegeaccess.org/) or the Texas A&MUniversity website (http://admissions.tamu.edu).

Texas A&M University has several conveniently located ProspectiveStudent Centers throughout the state, staffed with regional advisorsready to serve you. Please contact the center nearest you to learnmore about admissions, financial aid, academic programs and studentservices. Visit the website admissions.tamu.edu/psc for more details.

Aggieland Prospective Student Center1

Texas A&M University109 John J. Koldus Building1265 TAMUCollege Station, TX 77843-1265(979) 458-0950

Corpus Christi Regional Prospective Student Center1

5350 South Staples, Suite 405Corpus Christi, TX 78411(361) 289-7905

Dallas/Fort Worth Regional Prospective Student Center1

3900 Arlington Highlands Blvd., Suite 273Arlington, TX 76018(817) 375-0960

Houston Regional Prospective Student Center1

1225 North Loop West, Suite 200Houston, TX 77008(713) 454-1990

Laredo Regional Prospective Student Center1

6401 Arena Road, Suite 5ALaredo, TX 78041(956) 795-0412

Rio Grande Valley Regional Prospective Student Center1

5277 North 23rd St.McAllen, TX 78504(956) 683-8647

San Antonio Regional Prospective Student Centers1

40 NE Loop 410, Suite 605San Antonio, TX 78216(210) 212-7016

Office of Admissions1

217 John J. Koldus BuildingTexas A&M University1265 TAMUCollege Station, TX 77843-1265(979) [email protected]://admissions.tamu.edu

1 Se habla español.

The admission guidelines presented here are for admission to the Spring,Summer or Fall 2019 semester. While they are the best guide available,admission criteria are subject to change. The Office of Admissionswebsite (http://admissions.tamu.edu) contains the admission policiesand procedures in effect for 2019 admission.

Types of Admission and Application CalendarsAt the Time ofApplication

Term Opening Date Closing Date

FreshmanAn applicantwho:• is a citizenor permanentresident of theUnited Statesor qualifies forTexas residencybased on SenateBill 1528• is a degree-seeking applicantand is withoutcollege credit1 or• is still in highschool, with orwithout collegecredit

Spring 2019Fall 2019

Jul. 1, 2018Jul. 1, 2018

Oct. 15, 2018Dec. 1, 2018

Transfer

Page 2: admissions@tamu.edu or Coalition Application. …catalog.tamu.edu/undergraduate/general-information/...Texas A&M University 109 John J. Koldus Building 1265 TAMU College Station, TX

2        Admission

An applicantwho:• is a citizenor permanentresident of theUnited Statesor qualifies forTexas residencybased on SenateBill 1528• is a degree-seeking applicant• has graduatedfrom high schoolor equivalent• has enrolled ina post-secondaryinstitution aftergraduation fromhigh school• does not have abachelor’s degree• does not qualifyfor readmission

Spring 2019Summer/Fall2019

Jul. 1, 2018Jan. 1, 2019

Oct. 15, 2018Mar. 1, 2019

InternationalFreshmanAn applicantwho:• is not a citizenor permanentresident of theUnited States(or applicantfor permanentresidency)and does notqualify for Texasresidency basedon Senate Bill1528• after highschoolgraduation hasnever enrolled ata university as anundergraduatedegree-seekingstudent

Spring 2019Fall 2019Spring 2020

April 1, 2018Jul. 1, 2018April 1, 2019

Aug. 1, 2018Dec. 1, 2018Aug. 1, 2019

InternationalTransfer

An applicantwho:•is not a citizenor permanentresident of theUnited States(or applicantfor permanentresidency)and does notqualify for Texasresidency basedon Senate Bill1528•is an applicantseeking abachelor’s degree•has graduatedfrom high-schoolor equivalent•has enrolled in apost-secondaryinstitution, and•is not eligible forreadmission (hasnever enrolledat Texas A&MUniversity as anundergraduatedegree-seekingstudent).

Spring 2019Summer 2019Fall 2019Spring 2020

April 1, 2018Jul. 1, 2018Sep. 1, 2018April 1, 2019

Aug. 1, 2018Nov. 1, 2018March 1, 2019Aug. 1, 2019

ReadmissionAn applicantwho:• is a formerdegree-seekingTexas A&Mundergraduatestudent(including aninternationalstudent)• does not have abachelor’s degree• did not officiallyregister forthe previoussemester(excludingsummersessions) atTexas A&MReadmissiondoes not includeapplicants whoseonly previousenrollment atTexas A&M hasbeen as a non-degree student.

Spring 2019Summer 2019Fall 2019

Jul. 1, 2018Jan. 1, 2019Jan. 1, 2019

Nov. 1, 2018April 1, 2019July 1, 2019

Page 3: admissions@tamu.edu or Coalition Application. …catalog.tamu.edu/undergraduate/general-information/...Texas A&M University 109 John J. Koldus Building 1265 TAMU College Station, TX

Admission           3

PostbaccalaureateUndergraduateAn applicantwho:• has a bachelor’sdegree• wishes topursue a secondundergraduatedegree

Spring 2019Summer/Fall2019

Jul. 1, 2018Jan. 1, 2019

Oct. 15, 2018March 1, 2019

Non-degreeUndergraduateAn applicantwho:• does not wish topursue a degreeat Texas A&M• wishes totake specificundergraduatecoursework

Spring 2019Summer/Fall2019Summer only

Jul. 1, 2018Jan. 1, 2019Jan. 1, 2019

Oct. 15, 2018March 1, 2019April 1, 2019

High SchoolEnrichmentProgram

An applicantwho:• is a high schooljunior or seniorin the Bryan/College Stationarea• has a new SATscore of 1270, oran ACT score of27• has completedall levelsof relatedcourseworkoffered at theirhigh schoolEach studentis eligible totake 1 (one)course per fall orspring semester,and courseregistration willbe completedby the TAMUadvisor. Nosummer classesare offered at thistime. Classeswill be heldon the TexasA&M Universitycampus.Students andtheir parents/guardians will beresponsible forany lodging ortransportationconsiderations.Admission forthis programis on a space-availablebasis. Theapplicant pool iscompetitive, andadmission intothis program isnot guaranteed.

Spring 2019Fall 2019

Jul. 1, 2018Jan. 1, 2019

Nov. 1, 2018July 1, 2019

1 An applicant who has enrolled in a post-secondary institution sincehigh school graduation, with or without credit earned, must apply asa transfer applicant.

Items Necessary to Complete anApplication FilePlease see the Readmission, Post-baccalaureate or Non-degreesections for other items required to complete the transfer applicationfor those types of admission. U.S. citizens completing a non-U.S. high

Page 4: admissions@tamu.edu or Coalition Application. …catalog.tamu.edu/undergraduate/general-information/...Texas A&M University 109 John J. Koldus Building 1265 TAMU College Station, TX

4        Admission

school program should refer to International Admissions for questionsconcerning transcripts, examination results and foreign credentials.

An application is reviewed to make a decision about admission after allitems listed below have been received. The items must be received by theappropriate closing date to qualify for consideration for admission.

In addition, freshman applicants must show proof of meeting the State ofTexas Uniform Admission Policy to qualify for review.

Application submitted electronically via ApplyTexas orthe Coalition ApplicationApplication Fee (check, money order, Visa, MasterCard,Discover or American Express)—All fees arenonrefundable

• Domestic Undergraduate - $75• Domestic Graduate - $65• International - $90• Checks and money orders should be made payable to Texas A&M

University. International checks must be backed by a U.S. bank andbe issued in U.S. dollars. The applicant’s name and date of birthshould be written on the face of checks and money orders.

Guidelines for requesting application fee waivers:• Fee waivers are not available for international students.

Freshman WaiversApplicants who qualify for federally funded free/reduced lunchprograms may qualify for a fee waiver. Students must certify theireligibility on the application.  Please see our admissions website, http://admissions.tamu.edu/freshman/apply, for instructions for requesting awaiver.

Transfer or Readmit WaiversTo request a fee waiver, please provide your Student Aid Report (SAR),which you will find within your current FAFSA or a copy of an awardletter from your current institution. Checking the fee waiver box on theapplication will not satisfy the fee waiver requirement.

Please see our admissions website, http://admissions.tamu.edu/transfer/apply, for additional information.

Essays• Freshman applicants are required to complete Essay Topic A.• Transfer applicants are required to complete Essay Topic A.

SAT or ACT Scores• Required of all freshman applicants, including all international

freshman applicants.• Scores should be sent directly from the testing agency and must be

received by the posted deadline to be considered.• The SAT code is 6003; the ACT code is 4198.• Test scores must be from a test date within five years of the date of

planned enrollment.• The highest test score from one test date will be used. Texas A&M

does not combine test scores from different test dates.

Official High School Transcripts• Freshman applicants who have not graduated from high school at

the time of application must submit an official transcript indicating

coursework, credits earned, grades, graduation plan/diploma typeand a numerical class rank at least through their junior year. Ifadmitted, the applicant will be required to submit a final transcriptwith graduation date.

• If the applicant’s high school does not rank its students, a schoolprofile from the high school should be provided as part of theapplication file.

• Freshman and transfer applicants who have graduated fromhigh school at the time of application should submit an officialhigh school transcript that includes grades and credits for allcompleted coursework, a numerical class rank, date of graduationand graduation plan completed, or a certificate verifying completionof a GED program.

• Post-baccalaureate applicants are not required to submit a highschool transcript as part of the application file. Readmit applicantsmay be required to submit a final high school transcript if one is notcurrently on file with the university.

• To be considered official, a transcript must bear an original signatureof a school official or an original school seal.

• Applicants who have attended high school both in the U.S. and out ofthe U.S. should submit official transcripts from each school attended.Requirements for submitting international transcripts can be foundunder International Admission Criteria.

• For students enrolled in the U.S., copies of official transcripts fromother countries will be accepted provided the copies are on file andverified by the U.S. institution.

• Faxed or emailed copies are not official and will not be accepted.

Official College Transcripts• An official transcript is required from every post-secondary institution

attended even if the applicant did not earn credit, receive a coursegrade or the course is not transferable. Coursework from onecollege posted on the transcript of another college will not satisfythis requirement. Failure to acknowledge attendance and providetranscripts from all schools attended may be considered a fraudulentadmissions application resulting in a denial of the application. Acollege transcript for dual credit coursework earned in high schoolmust also be provided.

• Official paper transcripts are to be sent by the sending institution ina sealed envelope. The transcript will not be considered official if thestudent has had access to the transcript.

• Requirements for submitting international transcripts can be foundunder International Admission Criteria.

• Faxed copies are not official and will not be accepted.• For students enrolled in the U.S., copies of official transcripts from

other countries will be accepted provided the copies are on file andverified by the U.S. institution.

Lawful Permanent Residents of the United StatesAn applicant who has applied for or been granted Lawful PermanentResident (LPR) status in the United States by the Department ofHomeland Security (DHS) is eligible to submit an application as aDomestic Applicant. To qualify, you must include one of the followingwith the application:

• a copy of both sides of the DHS-issued Permanent Resident Card, or• the I-551 Entry Stamp and Immigrant Visa in the passport, or• an approved I-797 Notice of Action or I-797C Notice of Receipt.

Page 5: admissions@tamu.edu or Coalition Application. …catalog.tamu.edu/undergraduate/general-information/...Texas A&M University 109 John J. Koldus Building 1265 TAMU College Station, TX

Admission           5

If your parent is also a permanent resident, a copy of the parent’s proofof LPR status will be necessary to determine in-state residency for tuitionpurposes.

Note: If you have applied for adjustment of status to Lawful PermanentResidency and have not received your LPR card or Notice of Action thatsays Notice Type: Approval Notice, you are considered an internationalstudent once you are admitted to the University. There are certainrequirements that international students must fulfill upon enrollment.Please contact International Student Services at [email protected] for moreinformation about these requirements.

Required ImmunizationsTexas Education Code (TEC) 51.9192 requires all entering students(under the age of 22) to provide evidence of vaccination againstbacterial meningitis received within the last 5 years or a signed affidavitdeclining the vaccine at least 10 days prior to the start of classes forany given semester. Learn more about bacterial meningitis at http://admissions.tamu.edu/meningitis.aspx.

Notification of Application StatusCheck the Applicant Information System (AIS) website in Howdy (http://howdy.tamu.edu), Applicant channel, to verify your application has beenreceived and to determine if any credentials are missing. Please allow atleast two weeks to process credentials.

The Office of Admissions will make every effort to inform applicantsof incomplete files through AIS. If incomplete credentials are receivedwithin one month of the closing date, there may not be sufficient timefor the Office of Admissions to notify applicants. All items necessary tocomplete an application must be received by the Office of Admissions bythe closing date (not postmarked) to assure consideration for admission.

Required CourseworkApplicants who graduate from an accredited Texas public or privatehigh school applying to Texas A&M University must have completedthe Foundation High School Program preferably with the DistinguishedLevel of Achievement with at least one endorsement.  The high schoolcurriculum should be noted on the official high school transcript. Pleasevisit http://admissions.tamu.edu/freshman/coursework for a completedescription of coursework including information for home-schooled andout-of-state applicants.

State of Texas Uniform Admission PolicyTexas Education Code (TEC) 51.803-51.809 (State of Texas UniformAdmission Policy (http://admissions.tamu.edu/freshman/TexasUAP))requires that all freshman applicants meet one of the following collegereadiness standards in order to be eligible to be considered for admissionat a Texas four-year public institution.

• Satisfy the College Readiness Benchmarks on the SAT or ACTassessment; or

• SAT – 480 EBRW and 530 Math for tests taken after February2016

• ACT – 18 English, 22 Reading, 22 Mathematics and 23 Science

• Successfully complete the State of Texas foundation, recommendedor advanced/distinguished high school program or complete theportion of the program that was available to them; or

• Successfully complete a curriculum that is equivalent in content andrigor to the foundation, recommended or advanced/distinguished

high school program at a high school that is exempt from offeringsuch programs.

Students attending an out-of-state/out-of-country high school or homeschool are exempt from the Uniform Admission Policy.

Freshman Admissions

Additional Information for FreshmanApplicants1. Information Presented in the Application

• Extracurricular activities including time commitment and durationof involvement

• Leadership and/or exceptional talent as shown in extracurricularactivities and/or work

• Community/volunteer work including time commitment andduration of involvement

• Awards and achievements earned while in high school• Employment and/or internships including dates of work and

hours per week• Family educational background and household income• Number of people in household

2. Essay Topic A

Topic A on the application is required. Applicants to the College ofEngineering will be asked to answer an additional essay question aspart of the application.

Freshman AdmissionsWhen all credentials necessary to complete a freshman applicant’s fileare received during the admission application period, one of the followingcriteria will be used to determine who will be offered admission:

1. Top 10% Applicants from Texas High SchoolsApplicants who are Texas residents or who are enrolled in recognizedpublic or private high schools in Texas with a rank in the top 10%of their high school graduating class, on or before the admissionsdeadline, will be automatically admitted to Texas A&M University ifthey have successfully met the State of Texas Uniform AdmissionPolicy and have successfully completed the recommended ordistinguished graduation plan or the foundation distinguished plan.Choice of major is not guaranteed.These applicants must submit all required credentials by the closingdate in order to qualify for automatic admission.

2. Academic AdmitsApplicants who rank in the top 25% of their high school graduatingclass on or before the admissions deadline, achieve a combined SATMath and SAT Critical Reading score of at least 1300 on an SAT testtaken prior to March 2016, with a test score of at least 600 in eachof these components of the SAT, or achieve a combined SAT Mathand SAT Evidence Based Reading and Writing (EBRW) score of atleast 1360 on an SAT test taken after March 2016, with a minimum620 Math and 660 EBRW score, or earn a  composite ACT score of atleast 30 with a test score of at least 27 in ACT Math and ACT English,have successfully completed all recommended coursework and havesuccessfully met the State of Texas Uniform Admission Policy will beautomatically admitted to Texas A&M University, but not necessarilyto the major of choice. These applicants must submit all requiredcredentials by the closing date to qualify for automatic admission.

3. Other Applicants

Page 6: admissions@tamu.edu or Coalition Application. …catalog.tamu.edu/undergraduate/general-information/...Texas A&M University 109 John J. Koldus Building 1265 TAMU College Station, TX

6        Admission

Applicants not meeting the above requirements for automaticadmission but who have met the state of Texas Uniform AdmissionPolicy will have their complete application file reviewed in a holisticmanner to make an admission decision.

Information for all Freshman Applicants• All applicants should use the application questions and the essays to

present their academic background and personal strengths as well aspersonal circumstances.

• Letters of recommendation are optional. If an applicant chooses tosubmit letters of recommendation, only the first two received willbe considered. The most helpful letters are from individuals whoknow the applicant well and who can write about what distinguishesthe individual from other applicants in the areas of leadership,exceptional talent or special circumstances. Photocopies areacceptable.

• A competitive applicant who cannot be admitted to a major withrestricted enrollment (Colleges of Architecture, Business, Education,Engineering, Liberal Arts, and Public Health) will be offered admissionto their second major choice. If the second major choice is full, thenan alternate major must be chosen after admission to the university.

Admission Decisions

Notice of Admission DecisionTexas A&M University receives many more academically preparedapplicants for admission than we can accommodate. Admissiondecisions are made throughout the application period and announcedas soon as possible. A final decision may not be announced untilearly December for spring admission or late March for summer or falladmission. A limited number of applicants may be offered provisionaladmission that requires the successful completion of a summerschool program at Texas A&M. In addition, some applicants may beconsidered for the Texas A&M Higher Education Center at McAllen(http://admissions.tamu.edu/HECM), Texas A&M Blinn TEAM Program(http://blinnteam.tamu.edu), Texas A&M Engineering Academy at Blinn-Bryan (http://engineering.tamu.edu/academies/blinn-bryan), TexasA&M Engineering at Galveston (http://engineering.tamu.edu/academics/engineering-at-galveston), Texas A&M Engineering atMcAllen (https://engineering.tamu.edu/academics/engineering-at-mcallen), or participation in the Program for System Admission (http://admissions.tamu.edu/PSA).

Suspected Fraudulent AdmissionApplicationsApplicants for admission to Texas A&M University should be aware thatthe information submitted as part of the application process will be reliedupon by University officials to determine their status for admission andresidency for tuition purposes. By signing and submitting an admissionapplication, the applicant certifies that the information in, and submittedwith, the application is complete and correct and may be verified byTexas A&M University.

All students applying to Texas A&M University are expected to follow theAggie Code of Honor which states “An Aggie does not lie, cheat or stealnor tolerate those who do.” Applicants found to have misrepresentedthemselves or submitted false information on the application willreceive appropriate disciplinary action which may include rejection ofthe application, withdrawal of any offer of acceptance, cancellationof enrollment or any other appropriate disciplinary action deemed

necessary. In all instances of disciplinary action, the application fee isnon-refundable.

Pursuant to Texas A&M Student Rule 24.4.1 (http://student-rules.tamu.edu/rule24), acts of dishonesty include but are not limited to:

• Withholding material information from the University,misrepresenting the truth during a University investigation orstudent conduct conference, and/or making false statements to anyUniversity official.

• Furnishing false information to and/or withholding information fromany University official, faculty member, or office.

• Forgery, alteration, or misuse of any University document, record, orinstrument of identification.

For prospective undergraduate students (admitted but not enrolled), theinitial determination of whether an individual has submitted a fraudulentapplication will be made by the Director of Admissions Operations,with a right of appeal to the Assistant Vice President for Enrollmentand Academic Services and Director of Admissions for undergraduatestudents. All appeals will be considered by the Admissions DecisionsAppeals Committee and a recommendation made to the AssistantVice President for Enrollment and Academic Services and Director ofAdmissions. For prospective graduate students, initial appeals will bemade to the Dean of Graduate and Professional Studies.

Enrolled students suspected of violating Student Rules will be reported tothe Student Conduct Office.

Any University official who suspects that a prospective student orenrolled student has submitted a fraudulent admission application mustnotify the Assistant Vice President for Enrollment and Academic Servicesand Director of Admissions.

Residence Requirement for Baccalaureate DegreeA student must complete at least 25% of semester credit hours appliedto a baccalaureate degree in residence at Texas A&M University.  Aminimum of 36 semester credit hours of 300-level and higher courseworkmust be successfully completed in residence at Texas A&M University toobtain a baccalaureate degree.  For the Bachelor of Science in Nursing- RN to BSN Track, a minimum of 30 semester credit hours of 300-leveland higher coursework must be successfully completed in residence atTexas A&M University.  In all cases, a minimum of 12 of these 300-leveland higher semester hours must be in the major.

Abbreviations for Texas A&M Colleges and Majors  Abbrev.College of Agriculture and LifeSciences

AG

Agribusiness AGBLAgricultural Communications andJournalism

AGCJ

Agricultural Economics AGECAgricultural Leadership andDevelopment

ALED

Agricultural Science AGSCAgricultural Systems Management1 AGSMAgriculture and Life Sciences2 AGLSAnimal Science ANSCBiochemistry BICH

Page 7: admissions@tamu.edu or Coalition Application. …catalog.tamu.edu/undergraduate/general-information/...Texas A&M University 109 John J. Koldus Building 1265 TAMU College Station, TX

Admission           7

Bioenvironmental Sciences BESCBiological and AgriculturalEngineering

BAEN

Ecological Restoration ECOREntomology ENTOEnvironmental Studies ENSTFood Science and Technology FSTCFood Systems IndustryManagement

FSIM

Forensic and Investigative Sciences FIVLForestry FORSGenetics GENEHorticulture HORTNutrition NUTRPlant and Environmental SoilSciences

PSSC

Poultry Science POSCRangeland Ecology andManagement

RLEM

Recreation, Park and TourismSciences

RPTS

Renewable Natural Resources RENRSpatial Sciences SPSATurfgrass Science TGSCUniversity Studies USALWildlife and Fisheries Sciences WFSCCollege of Architecture AR3

Construction Science1 COSL4

Environmental Design ArchitecturalStudies1

EDAL5

Landscape Architecture1 LANLUniversity Studies USARUrban and Regional Planning URPNVisualization VISLMays Business School6 BA3

Business Administration(Accounting, Business Honors,Finance, Management,Management InformationSystems, Marketing, Supply ChainManagement)

BUAD

University Studies7 USBUCollege of Dentistry (Dallascampus)

DN

Dental Hygiene2 DDHSCollege of Education and HumanDevelopment

ED

Community Health CHLLHealth (Health Education, AlliedHealth, School Health)

EDHL

Human Resource Development HRDLInterdisciplinary Studies (EarlyChildhood-6; Middle School)

EDIS8

Interdisciplinary Studies (SpecialEducation, Bilingual)

INST

Kinesiology (Physical Activity,Dance Science)1

EDKI

Secondary Education8

Sport Management EDSMTechnology Management TCMLUniversity Studies USEHCollege of Engineering ENAerospace Engineering AEROBiological and AgriculturalEngineering9

BAEN

Biomedical Engineering BMENChemical Engineering CHENCivil Engineering CVENComputer Engineering (ComputerScience track)

CECN

Computer Engineering (ElectricalEngineering track)

CEEN

Computer Science1 (ComputerScience track)

CPSC

Electrical Engineering ELENElectronic Systems EngineeringTechnology

ESET

Industrial Distribution IDISIndustrial Engineering INENInterdisciplinary Engineering ITDEManufacturing & MechanicalEngineering Technology

MMET

Materials Science and Engineering MSENMechanical Engineering MEENMultidisciplinary EngineeringTechnology

MXET

Nuclear Engineering NUENOcean Engineering OCENPetroleum Engineering PETECollege of Geosciences GEEnvironmental Geosciences ENGSEnvironmental Studies ENSTGeographic Information Scienceand Technology

GIST

Geography GEOGGeology GEOLGeophysics GEOPMeteorology METLOceanography OCNGUniversity Studies USGECollege of Liberal Arts LAAnthropology ANTHClassics CLSSCommunication COMMEconomics ECONEnglish ENGLHistory HISTInternational Studies INTS

Page 8: admissions@tamu.edu or Coalition Application. …catalog.tamu.edu/undergraduate/general-information/...Texas A&M University 109 John J. Koldus Building 1265 TAMU College Station, TX

8        Admission

Modern Languages (French,German, Russian)

MODL

Performance Studies PERFPhilosophy PHILPolitical Science POLSPsychology PSYCSociology SOCISpanish SPANTelecommunication Media Studies TCMSUniversity Studies USLAWomen's and Gender Studies WGSTCollege of Nursing NUNursing2 NURSSchool of Public Health PH3

Public Health PHTLCollege of Science SCApplied Mathematical Sciences APMSBiology BIOLChemistry CHEMMathematics MATHMicrobiology MBIOMolecular and Cell Biology BMCBPhysics PHYSStatistics STATUniversity Studies7 USSCZoology ZOOLCollege of Veterinary Medicine andBiomedical Sciences

VM10

Biomedical Sciences BIMSUniversity Studies7 USVM

1 See this catalog pertaining to your major for the specific science.2 Choice available for transfer applicants only. Nursing and Dental

Hygiene applicants must have completed or be enrolled in pre-requisite courses at the time of application. Courses may becompleted at any accredited college or university.

3 All new students to the Colleges of Architecture, Business, and PublicHealth enter the lower level.

4 Requires CHEM 102; MATH 141, MATH 151.5 The curriculum leading to a professional degree in Architecture

begins in the four-year undergraduate Environmental DesignArchitectural Studies degree program. This degree provides entry tothe Master of Architecture program.

6 No spring transfer admission.7 Choice not available for transfer applicants.8 All students seeking elementary teacher certification will complete a

baccalaureate degree in Interdisciplinary Studies. There is no majorin Secondary Teacher Education. All students seeking secondarycertification (except those preparing to teach physical educationor health) will major in an academic discipline other than education(i.e., mathematics, English, computer science, biology, etc.) and takeappropriate coursework for teacher certification in the College ofEducation and Human Development.

9 Apply through College of Agriculture and Life Sciences.

10 Pre-veterinary medicine is not offered at Texas A&M. If you planto apply to the Doctor of Veterinary Medicine (DVM) program, youshould select a major that would be a good vocational choice if youdo not later enter the DVM program. Any major may be selected;however, some curricula more closely parallel courses that must becompleted before applying to the DVM program than others.

Change of Curriculum to Another CampusIn addition to main campus, Texas A&M offers certain undergraduatedegrees at its two branch campuses Galveston and Qatar and the HigherEducation Center at McAllen.  While enrolled as a student in residenceat any one of the Texas A&M locations, students may apply for a changeof curriculum to another site for a future semester. Students mustcomply with the established change of curriculum procedures andrequirements of their desired major, department, and college, and spacemust be available. Final approval is granted by the academic dean ordepartmental advisor for that major.

Transfer Admissions

Transfer AdmissionsTransfer applicants will be reviewed and receive a decision from thecollege/major to which they have applied. Prospective applicants areencouraged to follow the curriculum and guidelines outlined by thatspecific college/major.

Recommended/required coursework for desired majors is available onthe Transfer Course Sheets at http://admissions.tamu.edu/transfer/majors. It is to a student’s advantage to follow the guidelines andcomplete courses as outlined on the Transfer Course Sheets and inthe catalog. Applicants who begin a set of courses which have a two-semester sequence are encouraged to complete both courses in thesequence before planning to transfer to Texas A&M.

Admission Criteria• Transfer applicants must have at least a 2.5 grade point ratio (GPR)

on at least 24 graded semester hours of transferable coursework atthe time of application to be reviewed for admission.

• Students with less than a 2.5 GPR and/or less than 24 gradedtransferable hours will be denied admission and will not be sent tothe academic college for review.

• Transfer admission decisions are made by the college and major andare competitive; thus, admission standards may change from onesemester to another. Preference is given to the applicant with thehighest grade point ratio (GPR) and the most courses completed forthe major designated on the application. See the College SpecificInformation for the college of the major for which you applied.

• Applicants who drop or withdraw from courses frequently and who donot routinely achieve satisfactory grades will be at a disadvantage inthe review for admission.

• Spring grades may be used in the fall admission decision if requestedby the Academic College or in instances where the student did notmeet the university requirements for review. Spring transcripts mustbe received by June 1 for review with spring grades. A completeapplication must be on file by March 1 to be considered for falladmission and to qualify for spring grade review. Spring grade reviewis not an option for students studying outside the U.S.

• The entire application, including essay topic A, is considered toidentify admissible candidates.

Page 9: admissions@tamu.edu or Coalition Application. …catalog.tamu.edu/undergraduate/general-information/...Texas A&M University 109 John J. Koldus Building 1265 TAMU College Station, TX

Admission           9

• Some colleges consider second choice majors. The admissiondecisions follow the guidelines presented in the College SpecificInformation.  Space may be limited for those being reviewed for theirsecond choice.  Note that several colleges do not consider secondchoice majors.

Automatic Transfer Admission through SB 175A transfer applicant who graduated from a Texas high school and rankedin the top 10% of the student’s high school qualifies for automatictransfer admission to a 4-year university under the provisions of SB 175 ifthey meet the following guidelines:

1. The applicant must have graduated in the top 10% of his or her highschool graduating class from a Texas high school not more than 4years prior to the semester for which the student is applying. The top10% ranking must be stated on the final high school transcript, or theapplicant must have been previously offered admission under the top10% rule to the institution to which the applicant seeks admission asa transfer student.

2. The applicant must complete the core curriculum at a public juniorcollege or other public or private lower-division institution with a 2.5GPR on a four-point scale or equivalent.

3. Transcript should note core completion.4. The applicant must expressly and clearly claim in the application that

he or she is seeking admission under the transfer top 10% rule (SB175).

5. The applicant must provide all of the documents required fortransfer admission to Texas A&M by the posted deadline. Transferrequirements can be found at http://admissions.tamu.edu/transfer.

Applicants qualifying for transfer top 10% admission under SB 175 willbe admitted to Texas A&M but the choice of major is not guaranteed.Students desiring admission to Business or Engineering are encouragedto select a second choice major of interest due to the limited enrollmentcapacity in these colleges.

For information concerning the Transfer Top 10% Admission, please seewww.legis.state.tx.us/tlodocs/81R/billtext/doc/SB00175F.doc.

College Specific InformationCollege of Agriculture and Life SciencesTransfer admission requirements vary greatly across the College.Admission decisions are made by major and are competitive. Mostmajors have a series of required and preferred coursework to becompleted by the student prior to application. It is highly recommendedthat prospective students contact the academic advisor for themajor of interest to inquire about specific transfer admissionrequirements. Students should also refer to the Texas A&M UniversityAdmissions (http://admissions.tamu.edu/transfer/apply) websiteto review the transfer guides for each major. Also, note that transferadmission GPR requirements vary by major and several exceed theminimum 2.5 GPR. Completion of the essay indicating why the major wasselected and how a degree in this major will help meet career goals isrequired. For more information on transfer guidelines, coursework andcontact information for all academic advisors, refer to the College ofAgriculture and Life Sciences (http://aglifesciences.tamu.edu) website.

College of ArchitectureApplicants must have completed 24 hours of transferable courseworkat the time of application, and it is recommended that these courses beselected from the degree program electives described elsewhere in thiscatalog. The essay is an important component in the review process and

should explain why the applicant is interested in either the ConstructionScience, Environmental Design Architectural Studies, LandscapeArchitecture, Urban and Regional Planning or Visualization program.Applicants with less than a 3.0 GPR are rarely admitted. For moreinformation, visit the College of Architecture (http://www.arch.tamu.edu)website.

Enrollment in Environmental Design Architectural Studies andVisualization is driven by available studio space. Additionally, there areeight sequential studios in those degree programs which make it difficultfor students that transfer with more than 36 hours.

Degree ApplicableMajors

Courses TCCNS Number

Urban andRegionalPlanning,LandscapeArchitecture

LandscapeArchitecture,Urban andRegionalPlanning,UniversityStudies

ENGL 104,MATH 1411,PHYS 201 orCHEM 101

ENGL 1301,MATH 1324,PHYS 1302 andPHYS 1102 orPHYS 1111

EnvironmentalDesignArchitecturalStudies,ConstructionScience

EnvironmentalDesignArchitecturalStudies,Construction

ENGL 104,MATH 1411,PHYS 201

ENGL 1301,MATH 1324,PHYS 1302

Visualization Visualization ENGL 104,MATH 151,PHYS 201

ENGL 1301,MATH 2413,PHYS 1302 andPHYS 1102

UniversityStudies - GlobalArts Design andConstruction

UniversityStudiesArchitecture(USAR)

ENGL 104, OneTAMU CoreCurriculum Mathand Science

ENGL 1301

1 MATH 1324 from some colleges will not be a direct equivalent toMATH 141 at Texas A&M University but will satisfy the core mathrequirement for this major.

Mays Business SchoolMays Business School offers transfer admission to the most competitiveapplicants. The transfer admission process identifies applications thatevidence outstanding accomplishments, including academic credentialsusing the following guidelines.

Transfer admission to Mays generally requires excellence in the followingset of eight specific courses. Applicants desiring to major in business areencouraged to plan early, and incorporate this entire body of courseworkinto their curriculum prior to applying. It is especially important to havecredit for both required math courses before applying.

Mays admits transfer applicants for summer or fall admission. Springtransfer admission is not available. Applicants are expected to havecompleted and excelled in substantially all of the 24 semester hours ofRecommended Coursework. Due to the competitiveness of the applicantpool, successful applicants will have a combination of As and Bs in thiscoursework and a high overall GPR.

The entire application is reviewed. Successful applicants includecarefully written essays that demonstrate clarity of purpose, creativity,and an advanced writing style. Applicants are encouraged to identify theirintended upper-level major and to describe why they are well suited for

Page 10: admissions@tamu.edu or Coalition Application. …catalog.tamu.edu/undergraduate/general-information/...Texas A&M University 109 John J. Koldus Building 1265 TAMU College Station, TX

10        Admission

that area of specialization. Applicants who have special circumstancesthey wish to discuss are urged to share all pertinent information, withappropriate documentation, in their essay(s).

RECOMMENDED COURSEWORK FOR ADMISSION:  Priority courses to becompleted before transfer application to Mays Business School are:

Course Number Course Title TCCNS NumberACCT 229 Introductory

Accounting - FinancialACCT 2301, ACCT 2401

ACCT 230 IntroductoryAccounting -Managerial

ACCT 2302, ACCT 2402

ECON 202 Principlies ofEconomics -Microeconomics

ECON 2302

ECON 203 Principlies ofEconomics -Macroeconomics

ECON 2301

COMM 203 Public Speaking SPCH 1315ENGL 104 Composition and

RhetoricENGL 1302

MATH 1401 Mathematics forBusiness and SocialSciences

MATH 1324

MATH 1421 Business - Calculus MATH 1325

1 In lieu of MATH 1324 and MATH 1325, Mays accepts MATH 2414 andMATH 2413, respectively.

College of Education and Human DevelopmentThe College of Education and Human Development (CEHD) is activelyseeking qualified transfer students who are interested in teachercertification. There is a nationwide demand for teachers. In particular, theCollege is seeking students interested in high-need teaching fields: math,science, special education, bilingual, English as a Second Language, andforeign language. The College also offers a variety of non-certificationprograms.

To be competitive for admission, an applicant should, at the time ofapplication, have a minimum 2.75 GPR on at least 24 hours of gradedtransferable coursework. It is preferred that MATH 140/MATH 1324,MATH 142/MATH 1325 and two science courses from the desired majorbe taken prior to application.  Students specifically interested in AlliedHealth or Kinesiology Exercise Science should complete both mathand both science courses with a grade of "B" or better and maintain acumulative 3.0 GPR across all transferable coursework in order to becompetitive in the applicant pool.

Students interested in certification at grades 8–12 should completea baccalaureate degree in a discipline area and contact the Collegeregarding certification. The College of Education and HumanDevelopment does not consider second-choice majors.

Recommended Courses. Prospective transfer students shouldrefer to the College of Education and Human Development (http://education.tamu.edu) website to identify additional courses that willsatisfy degree requirements. Any student applying for a degree in AlliedHealth or Kinesiology is encouraged to apply with under 60 total hours oftransfer credit. Applicants should refer to the College website for moreinformation.

The College of Education and Human Development evaluatesperformances in all courses and considers all parts of the application.If you have repeatedly dropped or withdrawn from courses or if you aretaking courses that do not apply to the Core Curriculum or your major,they may have a negative impact when the application is reviewed. Awell-written essay is a student’s opportunity to share information andexperiences that could indicate success in a particular major.

The college has identified the following 31 hours of coursework astransferable for all CEHD majors:

Course Number Course Title TCCNS NumberBIOL 111 Intro. to Biology BIOL 1406ENGL 104 Intro. to Rhetoric and

CompositionENGL 1302

HIST 105 or HIST 106 American History HIST 1301 or HIST1302

HIST 226 Texas History HIST 2301MATH 140 Math for Business and

Social SciencesMATH 1324

MATH 142 Business Calculus MATH 1325THAR 101 Intro. to Western

Theatre and DramaDRAM 1310

POLS 206 American Government GOVT 2305POLS 207 State and Local

GovernmentGOVT 2306

Guidelines for Transfer Applicants by ProgramHealth. Applicants who are seeking transfer admission to this programshould complete BIOL 1406, CHEM 1411, MATH 1324 and MATH 1325for admission. Other prerequisite coursework that is recommended isSPCH 1315; and PHED 1304. Students may also take BIOL 2401 andBIOL 2402 to substitute for BIOL 319 and BIOL 320 for this option. Students specifically interested in Allied Health should complete bothmath courses with grades of "B" or better and at least two of the availablescience courses listed with grades of "B" or better.  It is preferred thatthese students also maintain a minimum 3.0 cumulative GPR across allcourses that transfer to Texas A&M University.

Kinesiology–Exercise Science. Students in this program are encouragedto complete at least 24 hours of the science coursework prior to the 60completed hours. The Texas Common Course Numbers for the requiredscience coursework on the exercise science degree plan (AppliedExercise Physiology, Basic Exercise Physiology and Motor Behavioroptions in the Kinesiology degree) are BIOL 1406, BIOL 1407, CHEM1411, CHEM 1412, PHYS 1401 and PHYS 1402. The remaining 8 hours(Anatomy and Physiology I and II) must be taken at Texas A&M. Othercoursework that students could complete include MATH 1324 and MATH1325 (required for transfer); ENGL 2311 or SPCH 1315; and PHED 1301. Students should complete both math courses with grades of "B" or betterand at least two of the available science courses listed with grades of "B"or better.  It is preferred that these students also maintain a minimum 3.0cumulative GPR across all courses that transfer to Texas A&M University.

Kinesiology–Physical Education Teacher Certification. Applicants whoare seeking transfer admission to this program should complete BIOL1406, PHYS 1401, MATH 1324 and MATH 1325. Other prerequisitecoursework that can be taken prior to admission to Texas A&M and theprogram and is recommended is ENGL 1301 or ENGL 2311; and PHED

Page 11: admissions@tamu.edu or Coalition Application. …catalog.tamu.edu/undergraduate/general-information/...Texas A&M University 109 John J. Koldus Building 1265 TAMU College Station, TX

Admission           11

1301. Students may also take BIOL 2401 and BIOL 2402 to substitute forBIOL 319 and BIOL 320 for this option.

Sport Management. Applicants who are seeking transfer admission tothis program should complete two lab sciences that meet TAMU CoreCurriculum which could consist of the following science courses: BIOL1406, GEOL 1403, CHEM 1411 or PHYS 1401.  Check with the Officeof Admissions for specific courses that may meet this requirement.  MATH 1324 and MATH 1325 are also required for admission. Otherrecommended coursework includes ENGL 1301 or ENGL 2311 and SPCH1315; and ECON 2302.

For more information about admission to the College of Educationand Human Development, please contact Casey Ricketts [email protected].

College of EngineeringApplicants should complete at least 24 hours of graded transferablecoursework at the time of submitting their application, all with a gradeof C or better. Transfer admission GPA requirements vary by major, withthe majority exceeding the minimum requirements for transfer admissionconsideration to Texas A&M. Transfer admission course requirementsalso vary by major. Successful applicants for undergraduate engineeringdegree programs in the College of Engineering will have completed allor most of the coursework listed before applying for transfer admission.Prospective transfer students should review prospective studentinformation accessed through the College of Engineering (http://engineering.tamu.edu) website for more information and details specificto each major.

Course Number Course Title TCCNS NumberENGL 104 (3hrs)1 Comp. and Rhetoric ENGL 1302MATH 151 (4 hrs)2 Engineering Math I MATH 2413MATH 152 (4 hrs)2 Engineering Math II MATH 2414MATH 251 (3 hrs)2,3 Engineering Math III MATH 2415CHEM 107/CHEM 117(4 hrs)4

Chemistry forEngineering with lab

PHYS 218 (4 hrs) Mechanics PHYS 2425PHYS 208 (4 hrs) Electricity and Optics PHYS 2426

1 IDIS will accept an equivalent to Introduction to Compositionand Rhetoric (ENGL 103  – ENGL 1301) to fulfill the compositionrequirement.

2 The MATH 151, MATH 152 and MATH 251 sequence can also besatisfied by completing the TCCNS sequence of four 3-hour courses(MATH 2313, MATH 2314, MATH 2315, MATH 2316). It is intendedthat applicants finish their calculus sequence, and not intended thatapplicants mix courses between two different calculus sequences.

3 Applicants are often admitted without this course, but it isrecommended.

4 Biomedical Engineering and Chemical Engineering requireFundamentals of Chemistry I (CHEM 101/CHEM 111 – TCCNS CHEM1411) and Fundamentals of Chemistry II (CHEM 102/CHEM 112– TCCNS CHEM 1412). All other majors in the College, exceptcomputer science, require CHEM 107/CHEM 117. Students attendingan institution without an equivalent to CHEM 107/CHEM 117can transfer an equivalent to CHEM 102/CHEM 112 to fulfill theCHEM 107/CHEM 117 requirement. Computer Science does notrequire CHEM for their degree plan but CHEM 101/CHEM 111 andCHEM 102/CHEM 112 can be used toward an approved sciencerequirement.

College of GeosciencesProspective freshman and transfer applicants are encouraged to refer tothe College of Geosciences (http://geosciences.tamu.edu) website fordetails on appropriate coursework for their intended major.  Specialattention is paid to performance on required math and science coursesand to the essay portion of the application. Fall and spring admissionpreferred. The College of Geosciences will consider second-choicemajors.

Overall, the College of Geosciences requires prospective transferstudents to be in the process of completing a minimum of 24 hours fromthe list of courses provided here with a minimum overall GPA of 2.5.Applicants are expected to have demonstrated successful completionof this body of coursework, to present evidence of success in a coursein their selected major, and in the mathematics and science coursesspecified.

The entire application submitted by transfer students is reviewed.Successful applicants include carefully written essays that demonstrateclarity of purpose and an advanced writing style. In the essay, applicantsare advised to identify their intended major within the College ofGeosciences and to describe why they are committing to study thatsubject. Applicants who have special circumstances they wish to shareare encouraged to address these within the body of the essay(s), whichare held in strict confidence.

Each major requires the courses as listed below:

Applicable Majors CoursesEnvironmental Studies (ENST) B.S. At least one course selected from:

GEOG 1302, 1303, GEOL 1303 and1103, 1403 or other introductorycourses in the Geosciences(Geography, Geology, AtmosphericScience, Oceanography) Two Mathcourses: MATH 1324 and 1325 OneScience course selected from: BIOL1306 and 1106, 1406 CHEM 1311and 1111, 1411

Environmental Geosciences (ENGS)B.S.

At least one course selected from:GEOG 1302, 1303, GEOL 1303 and1103, 1403 or other introductorycourses in the Geosciences(Geography, Geology, AtmosphericScience, Oceanography) Two Mathcourses: MATH 2413 and 2414 OneScience course selected from: BIOL1306 and 1106, 1406 CHEM 1311and 1111, 1411 PHYS 1301 and1101, 1401

Page 12: admissions@tamu.edu or Coalition Application. …catalog.tamu.edu/undergraduate/general-information/...Texas A&M University 109 John J. Koldus Building 1265 TAMU College Station, TX

12        Admission

Geography (GEOG) B.S. UniversityStudies - Geography (USGE) B.S.Geographic Information Scienceand Technology (GIST) B.S.

One course selected from:GEOG 1301, 1302 or 1303, or theequivalent to GEOG 203 (EarthSystem Science) Two Mathcourses: MATH 1324 and 1325 OneScience course selected from: BIOL1306 and 1106, 1406 GEOL 1403CHEM 1311 and 1111, 1411 PHYS1301 and 1101, 1401

Geology (GEOL) B.A. GEOL 1303 and 1103 or 1403 TwoMath courses: MATH 1324 and1325 One Science course selectedfrom: BIOL 1306 and 1106, 1406CHEM 1311 and 1111, 1411, 1412PHYS 1301 and 1101, 1401

Geology (GEOL) B.S. GEOL 1303 and 1103 or 1403 Thesefour Math/Science courses: MATH2413, 2414, CHEM 1411, 1412

Geophysics (GEOP) B.S. GEOL 1303 and 1103 or 1403 Thesefour Math/Science courses: MATH2413, 2414; PHYS 2325 and 2125,PHYS 2326 and 2126

Meteorology (METR) B.S. MATH 2413, 2414; PHYS 2425,CHEM 1411, 1412 (These coursesmust be completed with a B orbetter.)

Oceanography (OCNG) B.S. MATH 2413, 2414; CHEM 1411,1412; PHYS 2325, 2326; BIOL11106,1306 (These courses must becompleted with a C or better.)

College of Liberal ArtsApplicants will be considered on their overall GPA on at least 24 hoursof graded transferable coursework with a minimum GPA of 3.0 at thetime of application. Applicants should complete the essay indicatingwhy they are interested in admission into the selected major. Academicperformance in courses relevant to the student’s prospective majormay also be considered in admissions decisions. ECON, PSYC and INTSapplicants have prerequisites that must be met prior to admission.Refer to this catalog for all electives in each curriculum. For moreinformation about majors, programs and curricular requirements, pleaserefer to this catalog and the College of Liberal Arts website (http://liberalarts.tamu.edu).

College of ScienceApplicants should complete 24 hours, as appropriate to the choice ofmajor, with a cumulative GPR of at least 3.00. Strength of schedule is afactor in determining admission. Applicants will not be admitted withoutthe completion of the first two semesters of courses in their declaredmajor with a grade of B or better. Chemistry and Physics majors mustalso complete 8 hours of Calculus I and II with a grade of B or better.Biology students must complete 8 hours of Chemistry I and II with agrade of B or better and Calculus I and II with a grade of C or better. TheCollege of Science will consider second-choice majors. Students with90 hours of college credit will not be considered for transfer admission. For more information, visit the College of Science website (http://www.science.tamu.edu).

The transfer admission guidelines by major in the College of Scienceinclude:

BiologyCourse Number Course Title TCCNS NumberBIOL 1111 Introductory Biology I BIOL 1306 and 1106,

1406BIOL 1121 Introductory Biology II BIOL 1307 and 1107,

1407CHEM 101/CHEM 1111 Fund. of Chem. I/Lab CHEM 1311 and 1111,

1411CHEM 102/CHEM 1121 Fund. of Chem. II/Lab CHEM 1312 and 1112,

1412MATH 1512 Engineering Math I MATH 2413MATH 1522 Engineering Math II MATH 2414

ChemistryCourse Number Course Title TCCNS NumberCHEM 101/CHEM 1111 Fund. of Chem. I/Lab CHEM 1311 and 1111,

1411CHEM 102/CHEM 1121 Fund. of Chem. II/Lab CHEM 1312 and 1112,

1412ENGL 1043 Composition ad

RhetoricENGL 1302

HIST 1053 History of the U.S. HIST 1301HIST 1063 History of the U.S. HIST 1302MATH 1511 Engineering Math I MATH 2413MATH 1521 Engineering Math II MATH 2414

MathematicsCourse Number Course Title TCCNS NumberENGL 1043 Composition and

RhetoricENGL 1302

ENGL 2103 Scientific/TechnicalWriting

ENGL 2311

HIST 1053 History of the UnitedStates

HIST 1301

MATH 1511 Engineering Math I MATH 2413MATH 1521 Engineering Math II MATH 2414PHYS 2181 Mechanics PHYS 2325 and 2125,

2425PHYS 2081 Electricity PHYS 2326 and 2126,

2426

PhysicsCourse Number Course Title TCCNS NumberCHEM 101/CHEM 1113 Fund. of Chem. I/Lab CHEM 1311 and 1111,

1411ENGL 1043 Composition and

RhetoricENGL 1302

HIST 1053 History of the UnitedStates

HIST 1301

MATH 1511 Engineering Math I MATH 2413MATH 1521 Engineering Math II MATH 2414PHYS 2181 Mechanics PHYS 2325 and 2125,

2425PHYS 2081 Electricity PHYS 2326 and 2126,

2426

Page 13: admissions@tamu.edu or Coalition Application. …catalog.tamu.edu/undergraduate/general-information/...Texas A&M University 109 John J. Koldus Building 1265 TAMU College Station, TX

Admission           13

 StatisticsCourse Number Course Title TCCNS NumberCOMM 2033 Public Speaking SPCH 1315CSCE 2063 Structured

Programming in CBCIS 1420, COSC 1420

ENGL 1043 Composition andRhetoric

ENGL 1302

MATH 1511 Engineering Math I MATH 2413MATH 1521 Engineering Math II MATH 2414PHYS 2181 Mechanics PHYS 2325 and 2125,

2425PHYS 2081 Electricity and Optics PHYS 2326 and 2126,

2426

1 A grade of B or better is required on all courses. Requirements alsoinclude a cumulative GPA of 3.00 or better.

2  Must be completed with a C or better.3 Meets major requirement. May be taken as time permits.

College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical SciencesApplicants should have a 3.00 GPR on at least 45 hours of gradedtransferable coursework at the time of application and meet all CommonBody of Knowledge (CBK) requirements for Biomedical Sciences in orderto be considered for admission into Biomedical Sciences. Studentswho begin a set of courses which have a two-semester sequenceare encouraged to complete both courses in the sequence beforetransferring to Texas A&M. No second-choice majors are considered. Nosummer admissions accepted. For more information, visit the College ofVeterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences (http://vetmed.tamu.edu)website.

Transfer students with 45 or more hours completed at the time ofapplication will be given preference in admission. The transfer intoBiomedical Sciences must occur before the student reaches 75completed hours.  All CBK courses should have a minimum grade of a "C".  Any CBK courses transferred in from a community college must have aminimum grade of a "B".

Readmits will require a 3.0 at Texas A&M University and all CBK coursescompleted with at least a “C ” in all courses. Any CBK courses transferredin from a community college must have a minimum grade of a “B”.

CBK RequirementsCourse Number Course Title TCCNS NumberBIOL 111 Intro. to Biology I BIOL 1306 and 1106,

1406BIOL 112 Intro. to Biology II BIOL 1307 and 1107,

1407CHEM 101/CHEM 111 Fundamentals of Chem.

ICHEM 1311 and 1111,1411

CHEM 102/CHEM 112 Fundamentals of Chem.II

CHEM 1312 and 1112,1412

CHEM 227/CHEM 237 Organic Chem. I/Lab CHEM 2323 and 2123,2423

CHEM 228/CHEM 238 Organic Chem. II/Lab CHEM 2325 and 2125,2425

MATH 131 Calculus1

PHYS 201 College Physics I PHYS 1301 and 1101,1401

PHYS 202 College Physics II PHYS 1302 and 1102,1402

1 Students may choose to take MATH 2413 or MATH 1325 as calculusfor transfer.  These are equivalent to TAMU course numbersMATH 151 and MATH 142, respectively.

Field of Study CurriculaA Field of Study Curriculum is a set of courses that will satisfylower-division requirements for a baccalaureate degree in a specificacademic area at a general academic teaching institution. The TexasHigher Education Coordinating Board publishes information aboutBoard-approved Field of Study Curricula (www.thecb.state.tx.us(http://www.thecb.state.tx.us)). Texas A&M University complies withrequirements outlined in 19 Texas Administrative Code §4.32 regardingtransfer of course credit for completed or partially-completed Field ofStudy Curricula. Per 19 Texas Administrative Code §4.32, following thereceipt of credit, “the student may be required to satisfy the remainingcourse requirements in the field of study curriculum of the receivinginstitution, or to complete additional requirements in the receivinginstitution's program, as long as those requirements do not duplicatecourse content already completed through the field of study curriculum.”

Notification of Admission DecisionsTransfer admission decisions are made through a competitive reviewprocess. Applicants are notified of the admission decision on a rollingbasis throughout the application season. For those applicants requestedto submit spring grades for fall consideration, decisions should beannounced by early July.

Additional Information for Transfer Applicants1. Applicants to the Colleges of Architecture, Business, and Veterinary

Medicine and Biomedical Sciences should refer to the Upper LevelEntry requirements. Applicants to the College of Engineering shouldrefer to the Entry To A Major – College of Engineering requirements.

2. At least a 2.0 GPR on coursework in progress during the semester(excluding summer terms) immediately prior to enrollment at TexasA&M is a condition of admission.

3. Grades for all transferable courses are used in the computation of theGPR. This includes:

• Failing grades, repeated courses, WF, Incomplete, etc.• Grades reported as Incomplete are computed as Fs.• Plus and minus grade designations are not used; C+ is computed

as a C, B- as a B, etc.4. Credit by examination courses which are transcripted from other

colleges or universities may be transferred if sequential courseworkwith credit is also indicated. If there is evidence that the credit byexamination courses are part of the student’s program of study atthat institution, credit will be awarded for those courses that meet thetransfer guidelines. Note: Credit by examination will not count towardthe 24 hours required for consideration for admission.

5. Coursework taken as credit-by-exam must be listed as a specificcourse on an official college transcript to be considered for transferof credit.

Transfer Course Credit PoliciesTransfer credit on coursework complete at the time of application toTexas A&M University is determined when an official transcript fromthe originating institution is presented as part of the application for

Page 14: admissions@tamu.edu or Coalition Application. …catalog.tamu.edu/undergraduate/general-information/...Texas A&M University 109 John J. Koldus Building 1265 TAMU College Station, TX

14        Admission

admission or readmission process. An official transcript is required fromevery post-secondary institution attended (including dual credit earnedin high school) even if the applicant did not earn credit, receive a coursegrade or the course is not transferable.

The transfer of course credit will be determined by the Office ofAdmissions on a course-by-course basis. Credit submitted for transfermust be on an official transcript received by the Office of Admissionsfrom the Registrar of the institution where the credit was earned. Coursecontent will be determined from the catalog description or the syllabus.The transferability of credit will be based on the criteria below. All criteriaare intended to be considered together; for example, criteria 10 may bequalified by criteria 7.

Credit from Institutions Accredited by One of theRegional Accrediting Associations1. A course that is normally considered as part of a bachelor’s degree

program (not including the bachelor of technology or similar terminaldegree) may be transferred. The following criteria, taken together, areused:a. The course is applicable to a bachelor’s degree at Texas A&M.b. The course is similar to a course or courses offered for degree

credit by Texas A&M.c. The course content is at or above the level of the beginning

course in the subject matter offered by Texas A&M.2. A course that is intended for use in a vocational, technical or

occupational program will not typically transfer. In certain cases,credit for occupational skill courses will be considered. Transfer ofthis credit requires that the student’s Texas A&M major is engineeringtechnology or industrial distribution or that the student’s majordepartment and dean approve the course for use in the student’sdegree program after enrollment.

3. Credit for support courses such as Math, Science and Englishintended specifically for use in an occupational program will not betransferred.

4. Credit for the course must be shown on the official transcript insemester hours or in units that are readily converted to semesterhours.

5. A graduate-level course will not be transferred for undergraduatecredit unless approved for use in the student’s undergraduate degreeprogram by the student’s major department and Dean. This alsoapplies for a course offered in a professional degree program such asNursing, Law, or Medicine.

6. Credit by examination courses which are transcripted from othercolleges or universities may be transferred if sequential courseworkwith credit is also indicated. If there is evidence that the credit byexamination courses are part of the student’s program of study atthat institution, credit will be awarded for those courses that meet ourtransfer guidelines.

7. Courses similar to ones offered by the Colleges of Agriculture andLife Sciences, Business, Engineering or Geosciences at the junior orsenior level transfer by title only. Such courses may be used in thestudent’s degree program only if approved by the Department Headand Dean of the student’s major field. Validation of such credit, eitherby examination or the completion of a higher level course, may berequired.

8. A field experience, internship or student teaching course may betransferred by title only.

9. Credit for cooperative education will not be transferred.

10. A course that is substantially equivalent to a Texas A&M coursetransfers as an equivalent course. Two or more courses may becombined to form one or more equivalent courses. If there is doubtabout the equivalency of a course, the Texas A&M departmentoffering the course subject matter may be asked to determine if thecourse is equivalent.

11. As a general policy, credit for admission will be given for transferwork satisfactorily completed with a passing grade at anotherproperly accredited institution.

12. Grade Point Ratio (GPR) for any period shall be computed by dividingthe total number of semester hours of transferable courses for whichthe student received grades into the total number of grade pointsearned in that period. Credit hours to which grades equivalent toTexas A&M grades of W, WF, F, I or U are assigned shall be included;those having grades equivalent to Texas A&M grades of WP, Q, S, Xand NG shall be excluded.

13. In any case where a decision cannot be made using the abovecriteria, the Office of Admissions will determine the transfer of creditbased on University policy, previous actions of the University andprior experience.

Resolution of Transfer Disputes for Lower DivisionCourses Between Public Institutions in TexasThe following procedures shall be followed by public institutions of highereducation in the resolution of transfer credit disputes involving lower-division courses:

1. If an institution of higher education does not accept course creditearned by a student at another institution of higher education, thereceiving institution shall give written notice to the student and tothe sending institution that transfer of the course credit is denied. Areceiving institution shall also provide written notice of the reasonsfor denying credit for a particular course or set of courses at therequest of the sending institution.

2. A student who receives notice as specified in subsection 1 maydispute the denial of credit by contacting a designated official ateither the sending or the receiving institution.

3. The two institutions and the student shall attempt to resolve thetransfer of the course credit in accordance with the rules andguidelines of the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board(THECB).

4. If the transfer dispute is not resolved to the satisfaction of thestudent or the sending institution within 45 days after the date thestudent received written notice of denial, the institution that deniesthe course credit for transfer shall notify the Commissioner of itsdenial and the reasons for the denial.

The Commissioner of Higher Education or the Commissioner’s designeeshall make the final determination about the dispute concerning thetransfer of course credit and give written notice of the determination tothe involved student and institutions.

Credit from Non-accredited SchoolsStudents who transfer to Texas A&M from an institution of highereducation that is not accredited by one of the regional accreditingassociations may validate the work taken at the institution by one of thefollowing methods:

1. Successful completion of a comprehensive departmentalexamination or nationally standardized examination that is approvedby the department.

Page 15: admissions@tamu.edu or Coalition Application. …catalog.tamu.edu/undergraduate/general-information/...Texas A&M University 109 John J. Koldus Building 1265 TAMU College Station, TX

Admission           15

2. Successful completion of a higher level course in the same subjectarea when approved by the head of the department and the dean ofthe college.

Credit will be given to students transferring from non-accredited publiccolleges in Texas for work completed with grades of C or better if theyearn a grade point of 2.0 (C average) on the first 30 hours of residencework at Texas A&M.

Credit from Foreign InstitutionsTransfer work from institutions that do not follow the United Stateseducational system with instruction in English will be evaluated onan individual basis. A-level examinations with a grade of C or betterwill result in the award of transfer credit. We do not award credit forBaccalaureate II examinations. Credit will be given for work satisfactorilycompleted at international institutions offering programs recognized byTexas A&M. Official credentials submitted directly from the Office of theRegistrar and a listing of courses completed and grades awarded mustaccompany any request for transfer credit. Transfer work will be awardedby course title unless previous arrangements have been made using theTexas A&M University Transfer Credit Study Abroad Pre-Approval Form.Courses must be equivalent in character and content to courses offeredat Texas A&M. Credit will not be awarded from international institutionswhich are not academically accredited by the Ministry of Education orother appropriate authority in the home country.

No English composition courses will be transferred from institutionslocated in non-English speaking countries. American history andAmerican political science (government) courses will not transfer fromforeign institutions.

Courses taken at language training centers or institutes are generallynot awarded transfer credit. A transcript from such an institution mustbe issued through the Office of the Registrar at a Texas A&M recognizeduniversity, institute or language training center. Credentials of alllanguage training centers and institutes are carefully checked.

Credit for Military ExperienceState law (Texas Education Code Section 51.3042) and Texas A&MUniversity policy awards credit for military service to eligible veterans.To receive credit, student veterans must submit proof of eligibility to theOffice of Admissions.  Up to 12 hours of general elective credits may beawarded, as needed for the student’s degree plan.

Proof of eligibility includes:

• DD Form 214 showing 1 year active duty and an honorable dischargeOR

• Military orders OR• Disability discharge documentation AND• Documentation of high school completion (final high school

transcript or General Educational Development certificate)

Military transcripts are evaluated at the time of application and creditfor military experience/training is awarded based on recommendationscontained within the Guide to the Evaluation of Educational Experiencesin the Armed Services published by the American Council on Education(ACE).  Texas A&M University will award KINE 198 and KINE 199 creditfor completion of Basic Training.  Credit under this policy does notprohibit Texas A&M University from awarding additional credit.  TheMilitary Transcript Credit Appeal form shall be provided to the Office ofAdmissions with approval of the academic advisor and veteran.

Proof of eligibility includes:

• Official military transcript (JST or CCAF)

Military Service Credits are irrevocable once awarded. Potentialconsequences should be identified and understood before a requestis submitted. Students must consult their academic advisor for adviceon the number of credits from military service that can be used in theirdegree program to avoid excessive credit accumulation and possiblenegative effects.

Extension and Correspondence CoursesStudents may apply a maximum of 30 semester hours of approvedextension class work and correspondence study toward a degree.Students may apply up to 12 hours of correspondence credit earnedthrough an accredited institution toward the requirements for anundergraduate degree, even though Texas A&M does not offer courses bycorrespondence.

Correspondence courses taken through the Defense Activity forNontraditional Education Support (DANTES) may be accepted andincluded in the 12 hours allowed.

In order for a student in residence at Texas A&M to receive credit forcorrespondence work toward a bachelor’s degree, he or she should:

• obtain advance written permission from the dean of his or hercollege;

• present appropriate evidence of having completed the course.

Testing Services is authorized to act as an agent to receivecorrespondence courses.

International Admissions

International Admission CriteriaTranscripts/Examination ResultsOfficial academic records (transcripts, marksheets, diplomas, etc.) arerequired for all secondary and any university coursework completed.Records should include all courses taken in high school and every collegeor university the applicant has attended.

Official records require the original school seal or an original signature ofa school official (Registrar, Principal, Headmaster or Director of StudentRecords, Controller of Examinations, or the Ministry of Education).Official records should be mailed from the school directly to Texas A&MUniversity, Office of Admissions. Examination results should be sentdirectly from the examination agency. In addition to the original recordsin a language other than English, Texas A&M requires official translationsin English. Translations sent directly from the institution attended or froma recognized translator will be accepted. Transcript evaluations froman evaluation service which is a member of the National Association ofCredential Evaluation Services (http://www.naces.org/members.html)are strongly recommended and will allow faster processing of files. We recommend a document-by-document evaluation (with a GPA) forhigh school credentials and a course-by-course evaluation for college/university transcripts from non-U.S. institutions. For students enrolled inthe United States, we will accept copies of official transcripts from othercountries that are on file and verified by the U.S. institution. Unofficialphotocopies, fax copies and notarized copies of records, examinationresults or translations will not be accepted. Uploaded transcripts and

Page 16: admissions@tamu.edu or Coalition Application. …catalog.tamu.edu/undergraduate/general-information/...Texas A&M University 109 John J. Koldus Building 1265 TAMU College Station, TX

16        Admission

diplomas indicating graduation from secondary school (final high schooltranscripts) will not be accepted. These transcripts must be mailed.

Admission Criteria for International Applicants with U.S.Based CredentialsInternational applicants who are completing their education at aninstitution that is accredited by the U.S. will be reviewed in accordancewith the guidelines determined for domestic admission. However,these applicants must still meet international deadlines and testingrequirements. (See item 2 below.)

Admission Criteria for International Applicants withForeign CredentialsInternational applicants who are completing their education at aninstitution that is not accredited by the U.S. will be reviewed based on thefollowing criteria:

1. Academic Achievement• International applicants are expected to complete an educational

program that will allow them to be considered for admissionto a university in their home country. Examples include thecompletion of Grade 13, Form 6 or 3 A-level exams following theGeneral Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE). Predicted A-level exam results must be received by the application closingdate.

• Applicants must submit proof of high school graduation,typically a diploma, leaving certificate, or official examinationresults. Students that complete the West African ExaminationsCouncil (WAEC) exam must submit a WAEC scratch card by theapplication closing date.

• Successful applicants will rank near the top of their country’seducational system (B average or better) and score well aboveaverage on national exams.

• Secondary school courses: Appropriate college preparatorycoursework is required.

2. Testing and Proof of English ProficiencySAT or ACT scores will be considered in the review criteria forinternational freshman applicants. Applicants whose native languageis not English are required to demonstrate English proficiency bymeeting one of the following requirements to be eligible for review foradmission:

• TOEFL scores of 550 paper-based test or 80 internet-based test(taken within two years of date of intended enrollment)

• IELTS with a 6.0 overall band score (taken within two years ofdate of intended enrollment)

• SAT Evidence Based Reading and Writing (EBRW) score of 560or higher on test taken after March 2016 or SAT Critical Readingscore of 500 or higher on test taken prior to March 2016

• ACT English score of 21 or higher• Completed all four years of high school within the U.S.• Transfer from an accredited U.S. institution of higher education

with at least 30 semester credit hours including the equivalent toTexas A&M’s ENGL 103 or ENGL 104 with a grade of “C” or better

3. Individual Achievement and Recognition• Leadership positions held• Honors/awards received• Major national, state or Texas A&M scholarships received

Additional Requirements for International ApplicantsAfter AdmissionIf admitted, international students should review the InternationalStudent Services Channel, howdy.tamu.edu - Applicant tab, for next stepsconcerning enrollment at Texas A&M University. Additional informationis available on the International Student Services (http://iss.tamu.edu/Prospective-Students/You-are-admitted-Now-What) website.

Scholarship Information for International StudentsThere are a limited number of scholarships, fellowships, grants andloans available to international students, both in the admission processand throughout their enrollment. Some of these come from academicdepartments, particularly for graduate applicants, but there are alsoforms of financial aid available through International Student Servicesand Scholarships & Financial Aid. International applicants with financialneed are encouraged to complete the International Student Financial AidApplication (ISFAA) (http://financialaid.tamu.edu/Forms-%281%29.aspx).This form must be resubmitted annually for continued consideration.

One special opportunity that a student may be eligible for uponadmission to Texas A&M University is the Texas/Mexico EducationScholarship. Texas law allows a limited number of admitted applicantswho are citizens of Mexico, and who can document financial need, topay the same tuition as the residents of the State of Texas. For moreinformation regarding how to apply for this scholarship, please refer toInternational Student Services (http://iss.tamu.edu) website.

For additional information regarding financial assistance and otherscholarships available to International Students, please contact:

Scholarships & Financial AidTexas A&M UniversityP. O. Box 30016College Station, TX 77842-3016(979) [email protected]://financialaid.tamu.edu

For additional information, please contact:

International Student Services OfficePavilion Room 110Texas A&M University1226 TAMUCollege Station, TX 77843-1226USA(979) 845-1824Fax (979) [email protected]://iss.tamu.edu

Other Admissions

Admission Criteria for Other ApplicationTypesReadmission CriteriaAdmission decisions for readmission are based on the following:

• GPA on Texas A&M coursework;• GPA on coursework since leaving Texas A&M;• desired major; and

Page 17: admissions@tamu.edu or Coalition Application. …catalog.tamu.edu/undergraduate/general-information/...Texas A&M University 109 John J. Koldus Building 1265 TAMU College Station, TX

Admission           17

• information presented in the application and essay/statement ofpurpose.

If you were previously admitted but did not enroll and attend classthrough the official census date, you do not qualify as a readmit, and youmust apply as either a freshman or transfer student.

If you were previously enrolled at Texas A&M but did not attend classthrough the official census date of the previous long semester, then youmust apply for readmission.

Transcripts from institutions attended since the last enrollment atTexas A&M are required as follows:

If Desired Readmission Term Is Must Have Transcripts Through2019 Spring semester 2018 Summer session2019 Summer semester 2018 Fall semester2019 Fall semester 2019 Spring semester if applying

after June 1

Post-baccalaureate Undergraduate CriteriaAdmission is limited and is intended for applicants with a degree whowish to apply for further study at the undergraduate level to pursue asecond bachelor’s degree.

Additional requirements to complete a post-baccalaureate application:

• an official transcript indicating the receipt of a recognizedbaccalaureate degree

• a statement explaining why enrollment at Texas A&M is necessary• official transcripts from all colleges attended (official high school

transcript not required)

Admission decisions for post-baccalaureate undergraduates consider:

• GPA on transferable college coursework• completion of prerequisite coursework• information presented in the application

Priority is given to qualified applicants for their initial degree; therefore,post-baccalaureate undergraduate admission may be limited or maynot be available. Mays Business School, the College of Liberal Arts,the School of Public Health, and the College of Veterinary Medicine donot currently consider applicants for post-baccalaureate study. Seethe Classification section of this catalog for the enrollment rights andprivileges of this classification.

Undergraduate Non-degree CriteriaAdmission is limited and is intended for applicants with a high schooldiploma (with the exception of High School Enrichment Programparticipants) or for degree applicants who do not intend to pursue abaccalaureate degree at Texas A&M. This includes:

• local residents or University employees taking courses on a part-timebasis

• applicants completing established Texas A&M Universityrequirements for teacher or other certification

• applicants completing a prescribed set of courses as preparation forapplication to graduate study or professional programs (i.e., medicalschool, veterinary school, law school or CPA exam)

• others as deemed appropriate by the Office of Admissions and thecollege or program of admission

Additional requirements to complete an undergraduate non-degreeapplication:

• a statement explaining why enrollment at Texas A&M is desired• an official college transcript showing the latest collegiate coursework

attempted or a complete, official high school transcript if no collegework has been attempted after high school graduation

• additional information presented in the application may beconsidered

Priority is given to qualified applicants for their initial bachelor’s degree;therefore, non-degree admission may be limited or not available. TheCollege of Liberal Arts limits enrollment to summer only and the Collegeof Veterinary Medicine and School of Public Health does not allow non-degree seeking admission. See the Classification section of this catalogfor the enrollment rights and privileges of this classification.

Transient Session Only CriteriaAdmission is considered for applicants who wish to attend summer onlyand present appropriate credentials for the level of specified courseworkand apply within the processing period for the specific session.

Additional requirements to complete transient session only application:

• a statement explaining why enrollment at Texas A&M is desired• an official college transcript showing the latest collegiate coursework

attempted or a complete, official high school transcript if no collegework has been attempted after high school graduation

High School Enrichment ProgramTexas A&M University is pleased to offer the High School EnrichmentProgram (HSEP) for qualified high school students in the Bryan/CollegeStation area that will provide college credit and may also provide credittoward high school graduation. Admission for this program is on a space-available basis. The applicant pool is competitive, and admission into thisprogram is not guaranteed.

This program provides a chance to further your knowledge in a subjectyou have completed in high school and earn valuable credit forgraduation at both levels. For example, if you are interested in Physicsand you have completed all of the classes your high school offers, youmay qualify to continue to study Physics at the college level.

To be considered for this program, students must have completed alllevels of related coursework offered at their high school. Each studentis eligible to take 1 (one) course per fall or spring semester, and courseregistration will be completed by the Texas A&M advisor. No summerclasses are offered at this time. Classes will be held on the Texas A&Mcampus, and students and their parents/guardians will be responsible forany transportation considerations.

Eligibility requirements:

• You must be a junior or senior in high school in the Bryan/CollegeStation area.

• You must have a minimum new SAT score of 1270 or an ACT score of27.

• You must provide a recommendation form from your high schoolcounselor to participate.

Page 18: admissions@tamu.edu or Coalition Application. …catalog.tamu.edu/undergraduate/general-information/...Texas A&M University 109 John J. Koldus Building 1265 TAMU College Station, TX

18        Admission

Academic Fresh Start PolicyApplicants for admission or readmission to Texas A&M may choose tohave academic coursework that was completed at least 10 years prior totheir term of application removed from consideration in the admissiondecision (Texas residents only). All other admission requirements apply.Should a Fresh Start applicant be admitted, he or she will forfeit all creditearned prior to 10 years from the term of admission. Academic FreshStart cannot be requested after an applicant is admitted or enrolled.Academic Fresh Start must be requested as part of the applicationprocess.

Academic work done subsequent to ten years will be used in theevaluation of the applicant for admission.  If a student does not havecoursework subsequent to ten years, he or she will be considered foradmission based on the guidelines for new entering freshmen, which willrequire, among other things, an acceptable SAT or ACT score that hasbeen completed within the past five years.

Admitted Fresh Start applicants have “Academic Fresh Start” indicatedon their official Texas A&M transcript, are required to satisfy TSI/THEA requirements, and will follow the academic requirements of theUndergraduate Catalog of record for the term of admission.

Forfeited coursework cannot be considered as prerequisites butplacement examinations are allowed for courses which were notconsidered for admission because of the Fresh Start Policy. Onceadmitted on Academic Fresh Start, the applicant or student cannotsubsequently request that the Fresh Start policy restrictions be removed.

If an applicant has used the Academic Fresh Start Policy at a previousschool, the Academic Fresh Start will remain in effect at Texas A&M upontransfer.

Note: the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) does not recognize theAcademic Fresh Start program.  Students cannot be certified for coursesthey have successfully completed.  Students using VA Educationalbenefits should coordinate with the Veterans Services Office.

Entry to a Major – College of EngineeringFreshmen in General Engineering (https://engineering.tamu.edu/academics/advisors-procedures/entry-to-a-major/general-engineering-program), Engineering at Galveston (https://engineering.tamu.edu/academics/engineering-at-galveston), Engineering at McAllen (http://engineering.tamu.edu/academics/engineering-at-mcallen), or EngineeringAcademy programs (https://engineering.tamu.edu/academies) havea common first year engineering curriculum to allow time for studentsto learn about the various engineering degree granting majors.   It isrecognized that in most cases students are not made aware of all ourengineering majors prior to joining Texas A&M.   Students are introducedto the different engineering majors in the first year engineering courses,ENGR 102, ENGR 216 and ENGR 217.  Students are encouraged toleverage additional resources, including the career center, faculty,and advisors to get even more information.  Students must completethe following courses in at least two semesters before applying to anengineering major: two engineering courses, two math courses, and twoscience courses in the first year engineering curriculum.  Exceptionswill be made as needed for students entering with credit for the requiredcourses.  The entry-to-a-major process is designed for students to takeownership of their future by identifying at least three majors that area good match for their career goals and academic performance.  Theentry-to-a-major process (https://engineering.tamu.edu/academics/advisors-procedures/entry-to-a-major/general-engineering-program) is

designed to place students in the highest rank major possible basedupon capacity and student performance.  Students are encouraged tobe in a major as early as possible.  Students in the General Engineering(https://engineering.tamu.edu/academics/advisors-procedures/entry-to-a-major/general-engineering-program), Engineering atGalveston (https://engineering.tamu.edu/academics/engineering-at-galveston) and Engineering at McAllen (http://engineering.tamu.edu/academics/engineering-at-mcallen) must be in a major by the endof the third semester in engineering.  Students in the EngineeringAcademy program must be in a major by the end of the fourth semesterin engineering.

Transfer students are admitted directly to a major degree grantingprogram through the admissions process.

Upper-Level Entry into Colleges ofArchitecture, Business and VeterinaryMedicine and Biomedical Sciences–Biomedical ScienceCollege of ArchitectureTransfer StudentsTransfer students, who meet the University entrance requirements andwho desire to enter a major field of study in the College of Architecture,will be admitted based on available space and current College ofArchitecture entrance criteria. Following admission, all transfer studentsare placed on a 2.5 GPR probation for a minimum of 12 credit hoursto substantiate competency in required lower-level courses. Transferstudents will be admitted into the college with a lower-level classificationand may apply for upper-level status after at least one semester at TexasA&M University.

Change of MajorStudents currently enrolled in another major at Texas A&M Universitywith fewer than 60 hours who desire to change their major field of studyinto the College of Architecture must fill out a Change of Curriculumapplication. Deadlines for applications are as follows:

• March 1 for summer admittance (for Environmental DesignArchitectural Studies, Landscape Architecture, Urban and RegionalPlanning and Visualization students)

• June 1 for fall admittance (for Construction Science, EnvironmentalDesign Architectural Studies, Landscape Architecture, Urban andRegional Planning and Visualization students)

• October 1 for spring admittance (for Construction Science,Landscape Architecture, Urban and Regional Planning andVisualization students)

Students will be notified of action on their applications within 30 daysof the deadline date. The college will admit the best-qualified applicantsbased on the number of spaces available in their program of choice.

Mays Business SchoolStudents who meet the University and college entrance requirementsenter Mays Business School as lower-level business (BUAD) students.Students are encouraged to complete the freshman and sophomoresequence of courses as listed under Curriculum in Business.

Enrollment of Mays Business School students in junior- and senior-levelbusiness courses is limited to those who have been admitted to upperlevel (also referred to as upper division) in one of the seven BBA majors:

Page 19: admissions@tamu.edu or Coalition Application. …catalog.tamu.edu/undergraduate/general-information/...Texas A&M University 109 John J. Koldus Building 1265 TAMU College Station, TX

Admission           19

accounting, business honors, finance, management, managementinformation systems, marketing, and supply chain management.

The BBA (accounting, business honors, finance, management,management information systems, marketing and supply chainmanagement) upper-level entry requirements and application proceduresare as follows:

1. Admission to Upper-Level Major: To be admitted to an upper-levelmajor, a student must be admitted to Mays Business School andhave:a. Satisfactorily completed the following five courses:

Code Title SemesterCreditHours

ACCT 229 Introductory Accounting 3ECON 202 Principles of Economics 3ECON 203 Principles of Economics 3MATH 140 Mathematics for Business and

Social Sciences3

MATH 142 Business Calculus 3

b. Submitted application for upper level admission no later than thelast class day of the semester before their expected upper levelentry term. NOTE: For summer upper level entry, all requirementsmust be completed BEFORE the first class day of the FIRSTSUMMER SESSION.

c. Business students must complete the following three remaininglower-level Core Business Knowledge (CBK) courses at TexasA&M during their first upper-level semester, unless satisfactorilycompleted prior to upper-level entry:

Code Title SemesterCreditHours

ACCT 230 Introductory Accounting 3ISTM 210 Fundamentals of Information

Systems3

MGMT 211 Legal and Social Environment ofBusiness

3

d. BUAD students may preregister for upper-level business coursesin the semester for which they have applied for upper level.However, students who fail to complete upper-level requirementsshall not be permitted to remain registered in upper-levelbusiness classes.

2. Transfer Students: Transfer students admitted to Mays BusinessSchool enter as lower-level business (BUAD) students until theycomplete all requirements listed previously in item 1, at which timethey may apply for admission to an upper-level major field of study.Transfer students may immediately apply for upper level whenadmitted to Mays Business School if, and only if, they meet all upper-level requirements at that time.

3. Change of Curriculum Students: Texas A&M students who changecurriculum into Mays Business School from another college ordepartment at the University will enter as lower-level business (BUAD)students until they complete all requirements listed previously initem 1. Change of curriculum students who, when admitted to thebusiness school, qualify to apply for admission to the upper level maydo so.

4. Junior- and Senior-Level Business Courses: Preference for availableseats in junior- and senior-level business courses will be given tostudents who have been admitted to a BBA granting major in MaysBusiness School. All ineligible students who preregister for upper-level business classes are subject to cancellation of their registrationin these courses.

College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences—Biomedical Sciences1. A Biomedical Sciences (BIMS) major will be admitted into the upper-

level courses according to the following criteria:a. Completion of a set of Common Body of Knowledge (CBK)

courses with a grade of "C" or better in each course completedat Texas A&M. Any CBK course transferred from a communitycollege must have a minimum grade of a "B".  Normally, foradmission to BIMS upper-level courses, a student may haveattempted a CBK course no more than twice.

Code Title SemesterCreditHours

Common Body of Knowledge (CBK) coursesBIOL 111 Introductory Biology I 4BIOL 112 Introductory Biology II 4CHEM 101& CHEM 111

Fundamentals of Chemistry Iand Fundamentals of ChemistryLaboratory I

4

CHEM 102& CHEM 112

Fundamentals of Chemistry IIand Fundamentals of ChemistryLaboratory II

4

CHEM 227& CHEM 237

Organic Chemistry Iand Organic ChemistryLaboratory

4

CHEM 228& CHEM 238

Organic Chemistry IIand Organic ChemistryLaboratory

4

PHYS 201 College Physics 4PHYS 202 College Physics 4MATH 131 Mathematical Concepts—

Calculus3

Total Semester Credit Hours 35

b. A minimum of 55 completed semester hours with a cumulativeresident Grade Point Ratio (GPR) of 2.5 or better.

c. Process: Each student upon completing 55–65 semester credithours must have a degree audit to verify upper-level eligibility.

2. The Biomedical Sciences Program will continue to accept changesof major into BIMS according to current Texas A&M University policy,but restrict changes of major into the upper-level courses (BIMS)according to the criteria listed in item 1. Students in other majorsrequesting a change of major to the BIMS program must also fulfillthe criteria in item 1. In addition, the dean must verify availabilityof resources necessary to insure the student’s full-time enrollmentin required upper-level courses prior to admission to upper-levelstatus. If such courses are not available, the student will be deniedadmission to Biomedical Sciences.

3. To enter BIMS upper-level courses, transfer students must have:a. A minimum GPR of 3.0 in CBK courses with a grade of "B" or

better in each completed course if taken at a 2-year college. Agrade of "C" or better is accepted from a 4-year college.

Page 20: admissions@tamu.edu or Coalition Application. …catalog.tamu.edu/undergraduate/general-information/...Texas A&M University 109 John J. Koldus Building 1265 TAMU College Station, TX

20        Admission

b. Transfer students admitted under another major and wishingto change into BIMS must complete one semester of gradedcoursework at Texas A&M University with a cumulative residentGPR of 2.5, as well as meet change of major requirements forcurrent students.

c. Texas A&M University change of majors must have at least 55semester credit hours with a minimum cumulative GPR of 2.5.

4. Students seeking readmission will be considered on a case-by-casebasis, according to current catalog policy. No quotas will be placedon readmission; however, the decision to readmit will be dependenton resource availability and University policy.

5. Any BIMS student admitted to upper-level courses who then fallsbelow the 2.5 GPR requirement will not be considered in goodacademic standing in their major and will be placed on collegeprobation. Students who achieve less than a 1.0 GPR in any semesterare not eligible for college probation or grade warning status.  AllBiomedical Sciences majors must follow established probation rulesfor the Biomedical Sciences Program.

6. The Dean, Director or Department Head will reserve the right to waiveCBK or GPR requirements within the criteria established in TexasA&M University Student Rules.

7. No courses other than BIMS 481, BIMS 484, VIBS 310, VIBS 311, orresearch/directed studies courses can be taken S/U to be used in thedegree plan.

8. BIMS probation is determined at the end of the Spring semester.Students not meeting acceptable GPR requirements (2.5 BIMSmajors with 55 or more credit hours or 2.0 area of concentration(USVM) or BIMS majors with less than 55 credit hours) will berequired to attend Texas A&M University that summer and repeatcourses as needed to raise their GPR.  Students who achieve lessthan a 1.0 GPR in any semester (BIMS or USVM) are not eligible forcollege probation or grade warning status.

9. Students may only attempt CVM courses a total of three times.

Texas Success Initiative (TSI)The Texas Success Initiative (TSI) was instituted to ensure that studentsenrolled in Texas public colleges and universities possess the necessaryacademic skills to perform effectively in college and to provide diagnosticinformation about reading, writing and mathematics skills of eachstudent. All undergraduate students who did not meet one of the allowedexemptions must take the approved TSI Assessment test.

Students who do not meet established cutoff scores or other approvedexemptions for the TSI Assessment test are required by Texas law to beenrolled in, and actively attend, an academic skills course and/or programeach semester prior to completing all TSI requirements. Academic skillscourses in each of the three TSI areas are offered by Texas A&M. Failureto meet the attendance requirements of the academic skills course willresult in withdrawal from Texas A&M. The hours for these courses willnot count toward any degree program but may count toward determiningfull-time status.

Students required to take the TSI Assessment test should provide theirscore reports to the Academic Success Center at Texas A&M Universityat the address below.

Academic Success Center1133 TAMUCollege Station, TX 77843-1133(979) 845-2724

FAX:  (979) 845-6419

More information can be obtained from testing centers at most Texaspublic colleges and universities or by contacting:

Texas Higher Education Coordinating BoardP. O. Box 12788Austin, TX 78711-2788

College of Dentistry – Caruth School ofDental HygieneBasis For AcceptanceAll applicants will be considered using the following criteria. In addition,the applicant must be able to perform the essential functions required inthe curriculum. The quality of the applicant’s academic achievement is aprime consideration. A grade point average (GPA) is computed based onall courses taken in college.

Preference for admission is given to students with:

• A cumulative GPA and Science GPA indicating ability to succeed inthe program.

• Attention given to detail when completing the application.• A comprehensive biographical sketch that includes information

that will help the Admissions Committee know the applicant better.Details about the dental hygiene procedures that have been observed,a description of the community service projects in which you haveparticipated and information concerning your interests, abilities andattitudes that have motivated you to make the commitment requiredfor a career in dental hygiene are examples of information that mightbe included.

The application deadline is January 5. The Office of Recruitment andAdmissions encourages applicants to submit the online applicationforms by December 1. All materials related to the application must bereceived in the Office of Recruitment and Admissions by February 1.

• The following must be included with the application when it issubmitted online:a. Application for Admissionb. Secondary Applicationc. List of courses in progress and those planned prior to enrollment

in the dental hygiene programd. Biographical sketch

• Other materials that should be sent to complete your application:a. Application Fee ($35.00)b. Photograph sized 2 X 2 (does not have to be a passport picture -

can be regular photograph cut down)c. Transcripts from high school and all colleges attended (if you

attended a foreign high school, you do not have to submit a copy)d. Scores from Texas Success Initiative (TSI). (Or if exempt, SAT/

ACT or TAAS– usually scores are listed on high school transcript;you do not have to submit scores separately.)

e. Observation Verification Form (minimum 16 hours required)f. Evaluation Forms (submitted by a science instructor, dental

hygienist and personal friend)• An application is valid for one academic year only.• Official transcripts are required and will be accepted only when sent

directly from each school the applicant has attended.

Page 21: admissions@tamu.edu or Coalition Application. …catalog.tamu.edu/undergraduate/general-information/...Texas A&M University 109 John J. Koldus Building 1265 TAMU College Station, TX

Admission           21

• Recommendations are required from a dentist or a dental hygienist, abiology or chemistry instructor and an individual who has known theapplicant for some time; for example, an employer or supervisor.

• It is the responsibility of the applicant to keep the application filecurrent. Failure to supply grades, transcripts or recommendationsmay be perceived as an indication that the applicant is no longerinterested in admission.

InterviewsProcessing of applications begins the year prior to entrance intothe professional program and continues until the class is filled. Theapplications are evaluated, and an invitation for an interview may beextended. The purpose of the interview is to determine the applicant’sknowledge of the dental hygiene profession. It also provides anopportunity for the applicant to see the facility, meet with the AdmissionsCommittee and to ask questions about the Caruth School of DentalHygiene program.

All prospective students are encouraged to contact the college withquestions regarding prerequisite courses or the program.

To Access the Dental Hygiene Application Forms:The applicant will need to create an account on the Banner AdmissionsManagement Framework (BAMF) website. The applicant will be requiredto complete and submit the College of Dentistry  Dental HygieneApplication, the Secondary Application and the Ethnicity Form.

The application for the Dental Hygiene Program will be available on theBAMF website from July 15 to January 5.

Download Forms (Adobe PDF files):The Evaluation Form and Observation Verification Form are availablefor download. You will need to print these forms and submit them withsignatures through regular mail.

• Evaluation Form – top section to be filled in by applicant• Observation Verification Form

For questions about the application process, please contact TheOffice of Recruitment and Admissions at (214) 828-8231 or by email [email protected].

Mail forms and transcripts to:

Office of Recruitment and AdmissionsTexas A&M University College of Dentistry3302 Gaston Avenue, Room 525Dallas, TX 75246-2013USA

Transfer CreditTransfer credit will be determined by each component in conjunctionwith the staff of the college on a course-by-course basis from officialtranscripts submitted in the competitive admissions process. Coursecontent will be determined by the catalog course description or coursesyllabus.

Course acceptability is guided by these criteria:

• Courses completed at regionally accredited institutions areconsidered for transfer if:a. They are acceptable as credit for a bachelor’s degree at a

regionally accredited institution.

b. Course content is at or above the level of courses specified in therequirements for admission.

• Courses intended for use in a vocational, technical or occupationalprogram normally do not transfer; general courses within this type ofprogram may transfer.

• Credit on the transcript must appear in semester hours or credits thatmay be converted to semester hours.

• Credit by examination courses may be transferred if accepted byanother college and followed by sequenced coursework.

• Equivalency of coursework is determined by content found incatalog course descriptions or syllabi of courses. In case ofdoubt, departmental faculty will determine equivalency. The finaldetermination is left to the director of the Department of DentalHygiene.

• As a general policy, coursework with a passing grade may betransferred, but the applicant must keep in mind that admission tothe hygiene program is on a competitive basis and grades of F arecalculated into the grade point average.

• Course hours will be evaluated on a course-by-course basis but willbe transferred as a block of hours, and the grades do not calculateinto the GPA for the hygiene program.

• Credit will be given for correspondence courses on a select basis.• Typically, credit will not be given for courses completed at

institutions not accredited by a regional accrediting agency.• The college does not accept non-credit coursework to be used in lieu

of coursework taken for academic credit.

College of Dentistry Dental Hygiene Program (BS)Category RequirementApplication Fee $35 non-refundable feeAdmission Standards Completion of required courses with

GPA as high as possible. Admissionis competitive.

Use of High School Record NoNumber of Articulation Agreementsand Requirements for Admission

Not applicable

TOEFL** Not applicableOther Requirements Three LOR required and

TSI assessment. Interview;comprehensive biographical sketch;and 16 hours of verified observationof a dental hygienist

College of Nursing (Health ScienceCenter)There are three different tracks leading to a baccalaureate degree innursing. The traditional BSN track is for students seeking their firstdegree in college. The second degree BSN track (post baccalaureate)is for individuals who have already earned a bachelor’s degree inanother field of study. The third option is an RN to BSN program forregistered nurses who hold an associate degree in nursing. Prerequisitecourses, which are the essential foundation for nursing, must becompleted before entry into upper-division nursing courses through acompetitive admission process. In addition, all students must meet thecore curriculum requirements for Texas A&M University if not alreadycompleted at another institution.

Page 22: admissions@tamu.edu or Coalition Application. …catalog.tamu.edu/undergraduate/general-information/...Texas A&M University 109 John J. Koldus Building 1265 TAMU College Station, TX

22        Admission

The following documents are required for an application to be consideredcomplete and eligible for review:

• Application• Application fee• Official college transcript(s)• Completion of prerequisite and core curriculum courses with a grade

of C or better• Personal essay (see website for specific information)• Admissions Assessment Exam (HESI A2) required for traditional and

second degree BSN applicants only• Reference required for RN to BSN applicants only• RN to BSN applicants must provide proof of RN licensure in good

standing• Copy of permanent resident card, if applicable• Official TOEFL Scores required for international applicants and must

be taken within the past two years. Test scores must be sent directlyfrom the testing agency to be considered official.

The most current information regarding application to nursing can befound on the College of Nursing (https://nursing.tamhsc.edu) (CON)website. Applications must be received by the posted deadline. No latedocuments will be accepted. Admission to the college is competitive. Atthe time of application, students must be enrolled in or have completedall prerequisite course requirements which includes University CoreCurriculum and nursing prerequisites. Admission offers may be madeto students finalizing courses and will be contingent upon successfulcompletion of all prerequisite requirements and students presenting aclear criminal background check and a negative drug screen.

If the student completed a core curriculum from another Texas publicinstitution in a previous degree program, they are not required tocomplete the college’s Core Curriculum. Students transferring from outof state, from a private institution, those with an international degree oranyone with concerns about this requirement, please contact the HealthScience Center Office of Student Affairs for further clarification. Studentswill not be considered for admission unless the required coursework willbe completed by the time of enrollment.

Additional Requirements for International Applicantsand Applicants with Foreign CredentialsIn addition to each program's stated application requirements, applicantswith foreign transcripts must also include an official World EducationServices (WES), Global Credential Evaluators, Inc. (GCE), or EducationalCredential Evaluations, Inc. (ECE) transcript evaluation report listingcourse-by-course U.S. grade point equivalencies and semester creditsreceived. These reports must be sent directly from the evaluation agencyin the original sealed envelope to NursingCAS. Send to: NursingCAS,P.O. Box 9201, Watertown, MA 02471. If sent via UPS or FEDEX, sendto NursingCAS Transcript Department, 311 Arsenal Street, Suite #15,Watertown, MA 02472.

If admitted to the College of Nursing, applicants with foreign transcriptsmust submit the native language transcript along with an official Englishtranslation. These documents must include all original seals and/orsignatures and be approved by the Texas A&M Office of Admissions priorto enrollment in the program.

Students may wish to speak with an advisor and provideresults of the evaluation to determine transfer credits. [email protected] to request an appointment.

English ProficiencyApplicants whose native language is not English are required to submitproof of English proficiency by the application deadline, which is satisfiedby:

• a minimum TOEFL score taken within the previous two years of:• 587 for paper-based testing (p-BT), or• 240 computer-based testing (c-BT), or• 95 Internet-based testing (i-BT), or

• a minimum IELTS score of 6.0 overall band• completing all four years of high school in a U.S. accredited school, or• earning a baccalaureate degree following four years of study at a U.S.

accredited institution.

The College of Nursing requires scores that are higher than the minimumposted on the Texas A&M website due to the nature of the curriculumand expected student outcomes in order to verify English proficiencyrequirements. Test scores must be sent directly from the testingagency to be considered official. The institutional code for Texas A&MUniversity for the TOEFL is 6003. There is no institutional code for theIELTS examination; therefore, please use the Office of Admissionsaddress listed below when requesting your scores be sent to TexasA&M University. Tests should be taken at least eight weeks prior to theappropriate application deadline to ensure timely receipt and processingof results.

International Admissions ProcessingTexas A&M UniversityP.O. Box 40002College Station, TX 77842-4002

Code Title Semester CreditHours

Prerequisite CoursesEnglish 6American History 6Government (Federal and Texas) 6Psychology (General and Lifespan Growth andDevelopment)

6

Intro to Ethics (Culture/Language/Philosophy) 3Creative Arts 3Math 6Nutrition and Diet Therapy 3Chemistry 4General Biology 4Microbiology 4Anatomy & Physiology 8

College of Nursing (Health Science Center)Traditional, Second Degree and RN to BSNCategory RequirementApplication Fee • $75 Paid through Apply Texas

ApplicationAdmission Standards • Admission is competitive.

Page 23: admissions@tamu.edu or Coalition Application. …catalog.tamu.edu/undergraduate/general-information/...Texas A&M University 109 John J. Koldus Building 1265 TAMU College Station, TX

Admission           23

• Strongly recommended thatapplicants present a minimumoverall grade point average of3.0 (on a 4.0 scale) and requiredminimum grade of “C” in each of theprerequisite courses.

Use of High School Record • Not used for admission purposesbut required upon acceptance

Number of Articulation Agreements • Two: South Texas College andAngelina College

TOEFL See website for additionalinformation

Other Requirements Entrance exam for pre-licensureapplicants; Reference for RN to BSNapplicants; Personal Statement forall applicants through Apply Texas

Course Credit

Course CreditTesting ServicesTesting Services has primary responsibility for conducting researchabout students’ learning and development at Texas A&M and formanagement of testing programs. The unit serves as the center for creditby examination, placement testing and correspondence testing, as wellas national standardized testing. Other services include publicationof research reports about student characteristics and abilities, testvalidation studies and evaluation studies, scanning and scoring services,and student ratings of faculty.

Credit by ExaminationUndergraduate students at Texas A&M may earn course credits bydemonstrating superior achievement on tests offered through severalexamination programs. Credit by examination is available to freshmenwho plan to enter the University and to students who are currentlyenrolled. Credit earned by examination does not contribute to a student’sgrade point ratio. The University awards credit for scores on certaintests published by the Advanced Placement Program (AP), the CollegeLevel Examination Program Computer-Based Testing (CLEP CBT), theSAT Subject Tests, DANTES Subject Standardized Tests (DSST) andthe International Baccalaureate (IB) Program. Texas A&M also offersqualified students opportunities to earn credits by taking departmentalexaminations prepared by the faculty. Information concerning creditby examination may be obtained from Testing (http://dars.tamu.edu)Services (http://dars.tamu.edu), (979) 845-0532.

Please note these regulations concerning credit by examination:

1. Test scores and/or credit eligibility must be reported formally toTesting Services for credit by examination to be awarded. Creditis posted to the academic record once appropriate scores arereceived by Testing Services, the student has officially enrolled in theUniversity and the student has accepted the credit. For informationregarding current procedures for accepting credit, please visit theTesting (http://dars.tamu.edu) Services (http://dars.tamu.edu)website.

2. Students may not receive credit by examination for courses that areprerequisites to courses for which they already have credit exceptwith the approval of the department authorizing the examination.

3. A student may not have credit posted for credit by examinationfor a course in which he or she is currently registered. If a studenthas acquired a grade or exercised First-Year Grade Exclusion on acourse, then the student will not be eligible to take the equivalentdepartmental exam. Eligibility will not be affected if a student has a Q,W or NG in a course.

4. Please note that once any credit has been accepted it cannot beremoved.

Advanced Placement Program (AP)Examinations offered by the AP Program are administered during latespring by high schools. Students usually take the examinations aftercompleting Advanced Placement courses, although experience in anAP course is not required. Interested students should contact their highschool counselors for information concerning registration and test sites.High school students and currently enrolled students should have theCollege Board forward their scores to Testing Services, institution code:6003. Advanced Placement scores of entering freshmen are generallyreceived in July. Students will need to log onto their Howdy portal underMy Records and then Credit by Exam to accept the credit earned via APtests. Testing Services suggests visiting with your advisor before youaccept credit.

The following list includes all AP examinations currently accepted forcredit.

AP Examination Minimum ScoreRequired

Texas A&MCourse(s)

Credit Hours

AP Research 3 See academicadvisor

1-2

AP Seminar 3 See academicadvisor

1-2

Art History 3 ARTS 149 34 ARTS 149,150 6

Biology 3 BIOL 113, BIOL123

4

4 BIOL 111,112 8Calculus AB 3 MATH 131 3

4 MATH 151 4Calculus BC 31 MATH 151 4

41 MATH 151,MATH 152

8

Chemistry 3 CHEM 101,CHEM 111

4

4 CHEM 101,CHEM 102,CHEM 111,CHEM 112

8

Chinese 3 CHIN 101,CHIN 102

8

4 CHIN 101,CHIN 102,CHIN 201,CHIN 202

14

ComparativeGovernments

3 POLS 229 3

ComputerScience A

3 CSCE 110 4

Page 24: admissions@tamu.edu or Coalition Application. …catalog.tamu.edu/undergraduate/general-information/...Texas A&M University 109 John J. Koldus Building 1265 TAMU College Station, TX

24        Admission

ComputerSciencePrinciples

3 CSCE 110 4

Economics:Macroeconomics

3 ECON 203 3

Economics:Microeconomics

3 ECON 202 3

English Lang. andComp.

3 ENGL 104 3

4 ENGL 104,ENGL 241

6

English Lit. andComp.

3 ENGL 104 3

4 ENGL 104,ENGL 203

6

EnvironmentalScience

3 GEOS 105 3

European History 3 HIST 102 3French Language 3 FREN 101,

FREN 1028

4 FREN 101,FREN 102,FREN 201,FREN 202

14

GermanLanguage

3 GERM 101,GERM 102

8

4 GERM 101,GERM 102,GERM 201,GERM 202

14

HumanGeography

3 GEOG 201 3

Italian Language 3 ITAL 101,ITAL 102

8

4 ITAL 101,ITAL 102,ITAL 201,ITAL 202

14

JapaneseLanguage

3 JAPN 101,JAPN 102

8

4 JAPN 101,JAPN 102,JAPN 201,JAPN 202

14

Latin 3 CLAS 121,CLAS 122

8

4 CLAS 121,CLAS 122,CLAS 221,CLAS 222

14

Macroeconomics 3 ECON 203 3Microeconomics 3 ECON 203 3Music Theory 3 MUSC 102 3Physics 1 3 PHYS 205 4

4 PHYS 201 4Physics 2 3 PHYS 205 4

4 PHYS 202 4

Physics C:Mechanics

3 PHYS 218 4

Physics C: Elect.and Magnetism

3 PHYS 208 4

Psychology 3 PSYC 107 3SpanishLanguage

3 SPAN 101,SPAN 102

8

4 SPAN 101,SPAN 102,SPAN 201

11

5 SPAN 101,SPAN 102,SPAN 201,SPAN 202

14

SpanishLiterature

3 SPAN 202 3

5 SPAN 202,SPAN 320

6

Statistics 3 STAT 201 3Studio Art:Drawing

3 ARTS 103 3

4 ARTS 103,111 6Studio Art: 2-D 3 ARTS 103 3

4 ARTS 103,111 6Studio Art: 3-DDesign

3 ARTS 103 3

U.S. Governmentand Politics

3 POLS 206 3

U.S. History 3 HIST 105,HIST 106

6

World History 3 HIST 104 3

1 Students must consult their academic advisor for advice on thenumber of credits that can be used in their degree program to avoidexcessive credit accumulation and possible negative effects.

2 Variable credits up to a maximum of 3 credit hours.  Students mustconsult their academic advisor for advice on the number of creditsthat can be used in their degree program to avoid excessive creditaccumulation and possible negative effects.

For instructions on accepting AP credit, please visit our website (http://dars.tamu.edu).

College Level Examination Program Computer-BasedTesting (CLEP CBT)CLEP CBT tests are designed to evaluate nontraditional college-leveleducation such as independent study, correspondence work, etc. Bothenrolled undergraduate students and entering freshmen may receiveCLEP CBT credit for the courses which are listed below. Only examinationtitles below are currently accepted. The minimum scores listed below arebased on the current version of CLEP CBT Examinations. Students willneed to log onto their Howdy portal under My Records and then Creditby Exam to accept the credit earned via CLEP tests. Testing Servicessuggests visiting with your advisor before you accept credit.

Page 25: admissions@tamu.edu or Coalition Application. …catalog.tamu.edu/undergraduate/general-information/...Texas A&M University 109 John J. Koldus Building 1265 TAMU College Station, TX

Admission           25

CLEP CBTSubjectExamination

Minimum ScoreRequired

Texas A&MCourse(s)

Credit Hours

Algebra 50 MATH 102 3AmericanGovernment

50 POLS 206 3

Calculus withElementaryFunctions

50 MATH 151 orMATH 171

4

Chemistry 45 CHEM 101/CHEM 111

4

50 CHEM 101/CHEM 102,CHEM 111/CHEM 102

8

FinancialAccounting

50 ACCT 209 3

History ofthe UnitedStates I: EarlyColonization to1877

50 HIST 105 3

History of theUnited StatesII: 1865 to thePresent

50 HIST 106 3

Human Growthand Development

50 EPSY 320 orPSYC 307

3

InformationSystems andComputerApplications

50 ISTM 209 3

Macroeconomics 50 ECON 203 3Microeconomics 50 ECON 202 3Pre-Calculus 50 MATH 150 4Psychology,Introductory

50 PSYC 107 3

Sociology,Introductory

50 SOCI 205 3

WesternCivilization I:Ancient NearEast to 1648

50 HIST 101 3

WesternCivilization II:1648 to Present

50 HIST 102 3

For instructions on accepting CLEP credit, please visit the TestingServices website (http://dars.tamu.edu).

Dantes Subject Standardized Tests (DSST) ProgramThe DSST Program is available to all interested persons. Enrolledundergraduate students and entering freshmen may receive DSST creditfor the courses listed below. For more information about the test, pleasecontact Testing Services.

DSSTExamination

Minimum ScoreRequired

Texas A&MCourse(s)

Credit Hours

Art of theWestern World

50 ARTS 149,ARTS 150

6

Astronomy 48 ASTR 101 3Business Law II 52 MGMT 212 3Lifespan Develop.Psyc.

47 PSYC 307 3

Principles ofStatistics

48 STAT 201 orPSYC 203

3,4

International Baccalaureate (IB)Texas A&M University, in compliance with SB111, will grant at least24 semester credit hours of course-specific college credit in subject-appropriate areas on all International Baccalaureate (IB) exam scores of4 or above as long as the incoming freshman has earned an IB diploma.While some course credit will be awarded regardless of a student’s IBdiploma status, some course credit at Texas A&M University may besubject to the successful completion of the IB diploma.

Entering freshman students should submit their InternationalBaccalaureate transcript to Texas A&M University, institution code:01355, for review. Students should contact Testing Services regardingtheir eligibility for course credit. Students should work with an academicadvisor to determine the use of the IB credits in their individual degreeplan and the impact accepting the credit may have upon tuition rebateeligibility, tuition charges for excessive total hours, and preparedness forsequential coursework based on IB test scores. Students will need to logonto their Howdy portal under My Records and then Credit by Exam toaccept the credit earned via IB tests. Testing Services suggests visitingwith your advisor before you accept credit.

Texas A&M University will notify IB applicants of their eligibility to receivecredit by posting information on the website, Testing Services, and byestablishing links to other web pages.

The evaluation of IB courses in order to identify the appropriate coursecredit is continuing and will be posted as it becomes available. Thefollowing list includes all IB examinations currently accepted for credit.

IB Higher LevelExamination

Minimum ScoreRequired

Texas A&MCourse(s)

Credit Hours

Arabic: LanguageA or B SL

4 ARAB 101 4

5 ARAB 101,ARAB 102

8

6 ARAB 101,ARAB 102,ARAB 201

11

7 ARAB 101,ARAB 102,ARAB 201,ARAB 202

14

Arabic: LanguageA or B HL

3 ARAB 101 4

4 ARAB 101,ARAB 102

8

5 ARAB 101,ARAB 102,ARAB 201

11

Page 26: admissions@tamu.edu or Coalition Application. …catalog.tamu.edu/undergraduate/general-information/...Texas A&M University 109 John J. Koldus Building 1265 TAMU College Station, TX

26        Admission

6 ARAB 101,ARAB 102,ARAB 201,ARAB 202

14

Biology SL 4 BIOL 113/BIOL123

4

Biology HL 4 BIOL 111 45 BIOL 111,

BIOL 1128

BusinessManagement SL

4 MGMT 309 3

BusinessManagement HL

4 MGMT 309 3

Chemistry SL 4 CHEM 106/CHEM 116

4

Chemistry HL 4 CHEM 101/CHEM 111

4

5 CHEM 101,CHEM 102,CHEM 111,CHEM 112

8

Chinese:Language A or BHL

3 CHIN 101 4

4 CHIN 101,CHIN 102

8

5 CHIN 101,CHIN 102,CHIN 201

11

6 CHIN 101,CHIN 102,CHIN 201,CHIN 202

14

Chinese:Language A or BSL

4 CHIN 101 4

5 CHIN 101,CHIN 102

8

6 CHIN 101,CHIN 102,CHIN 201

11

7 CHIN 101,CHIN 102,CHIN 201,CHIN 202

14

Classical Greek:A or B SL

4 CLAS 101 4

5 CLAS 101,CLAS 102

8

6 CLAS 101,CLAS 102,CLAS 211

11

Classical GreekHL

3 CLAS 101 4

4 CLAS 101,CLAS 102

8

6 CLAS 101,CLAS 102,CLAS 211

11

ComputerScience SL

4 CSCE 111 4

ComputerScience HL

4 CSCE 111 4

Economics SL 4 ECON 203 3Economics HL 4 ECON 203 3English: Lang. ASL

4 ENGL 104 3

English: Lang. AHL

4 ENGL 104 3

5 ENGL 104,ENGL 222/MODL 222

6

EnvironmentalSystems

4 GEOS 105 3

French: Lang. Aor B SL

4 FREN 101 4

5 FREN 101,FREN 102

8

6 FREN 101,FREN 102,FREN 201

11

7 FREN 101,FREN 102,FREN 201,FREN 202

14

French: Lang. Aor B HL

3 FREN 101 4

4 FREN 101,FREN 102

8

5 FREN 101,FREN 102,FREN 201

11

6 FREN 101,FREN 102,FREN 201,FREN 202

14

Fundamentals ofMusic

5 MUSC 102, MUSC202

6

FurtherMathematics SL

4 MATH 102 3

5 MATH 150 4Geography SL 4 GEOG 201 3Geography HL 4 GEOG 201 3German: Lang. Aor B SL

4 GERM 101 4

5 GERM 101,GERM 102

8

6 GERM 101,GERM 102,GERM 201

11

Page 27: admissions@tamu.edu or Coalition Application. …catalog.tamu.edu/undergraduate/general-information/...Texas A&M University 109 John J. Koldus Building 1265 TAMU College Station, TX

Admission           27

7 GERM 101,GERM 102,GERM 201,GERM 202

14

German: Lang. Aor B HL

3 GERM 101 4

4 GERM 101,GERM 102

8

5 GERM 101,GERM 102,GERM 201

11

6 GERM 101,GERM 102,GERM 201,GERM 202

14

History HLAfrica 4 HIST 104 3Americas 4 HIST 105 3

5 HIST 105,HIST 106

6

E & SE Asia andOceania

4 HIST 104 3

Europe 4 HIST 102 3South Asia &Middle East

4 HIST 104 3

History SLIslamic History 4 HIST 221/

RELS 2213

Info Tech in aGlobal Society SL

4 PHIL 205 3

Info Tech in aGlobal Society HL

4 PHIL 205 3

Italian: Lang. A orB SL

4 ITAL 101 4

4 ITAL 101,ITAL 102

8

6 ITAL 101,ITAL 102,ITAL 201

11

7 ITAL 101,ITAL 102,ITAL 201,ITAL 202

14

Italian: Lang. A orB HL

3 ITAL 101 4

4 ITAL 101,ITAL 102

8

5 ITAL 101,ITAL 102,ITAL 201

11

6 ITAL 101,ITAL 102,ITAL 201,ITAL 202

14

Japanese: Lang.A or B SL

4 JAPN 101 4

5 JAPN 101,JAPN 102

8

6 JAPN 101,JAPN 102,JAPN 201

11

7 JAPN 101,JAPN 102,JAPN 201,JAPN 202

14

Japanese: Lang.A or B HL

3 JAPN 101 4

4 JAPN 101,JAPN 102

8

5 JAPN 101,JAPN 102,JAPN 201

11

6 JAPN 101,JAPN 102,JAPN 201,JAPN 202

14

Latin SL 4 CLAS 121 45 CLAS 121,

CLAS 1228

6 CLAS 121,CLAS 122,CLAS 221

11

7 CLAS 121,CLAS 122,CLAS 221,CLAS 222

14

Latin HL 3 CLAS 121 44 CLAS 121,

CLAS 1228

5 CLAS 121,CLAS 122,CLAS 221

11

6 CLAS 121,CLAS 122,CLAS 221,CLAS 222

14

Mathematics SL 4 MATH 150 4Mathematics HL 4 MATH 150 4

5 MATH 150,MATH 1511

8

MathematicalMethods SL

4 MATH 102 3

5 MATH 150 4MathematicalStudies SL

4 MATH 102 3

5 MATH 150 4Music SL 4 MUSI 201 3Music HL 4 MUSI 201 3Other LanguagesSL

4 MODL 289 4

5 MODL 289 86 MODL 289 117 MODL 289 14

Page 28: admissions@tamu.edu or Coalition Application. …catalog.tamu.edu/undergraduate/general-information/...Texas A&M University 109 John J. Koldus Building 1265 TAMU College Station, TX

28        Admission

Other LanguagesHL

3 MODL 289 4

4 MODL 289 85 MODL 289 116 MODL 289 14

Philosophy SL 4 PHIL 251 3Philosophy HL 4 PHIL 251 3Physics SL 4 PHYS 205 4Physics HL 4 PHYS 201,

PHYS 2024

Psychology SL 4 PSYC 107 3Psychology HL 4 PSYC 107 3Russian:Language A or BSL

4 RUSS 101 4

5 RUSS 101,RUSS 102

8

6 RUSS 101,RUSS 102,RUSS 201

11

7 RUSS 101,RUSS 102,RUSS 201,RUSS 202

14

Russian:Language A or BHL

3 RUSS 101 4

4 RUSS 101,RUSS 102

8

5 RUSS 101,RUSS 102,RUSS 201

11

6 RUSS 101,RUSS 102,RUSS 201,RUSS 202

14

Social andCulturalAnthropology SL

4 ANTH 210 3

Social andCulturalAnthropology HL

4 ANTH 210 3

Spanish: Lang. Aor B SL

4 SPAN 101 4

5 SPAN 101,SPAN 102

8

6 SPAN 101,SPAN 102,SPAN 201

11

7 SPAN 101,SPAN 102,SPAN 201,SPAN 202

14

Spanish: Lang. Aor B HL

3 SPAN 101 4

4 SPAN 101,SPAN 102

8

5 SPAN 101,SPAN 102,SPAN 201

11

6/7 SPAN 101,SPAN 102,SPAN 201,SPAN 202

14

Theater Arts SL 4 THAR 101 3Theater Arts HL 4 THAR 101 3Visual Arts SL 4 ENDS 101 3Visual Arts HL 4 ENDS 101 3

1 Credit for MATH 151 may be substituted for MATH 131, MATH 142 orMATH 171.

For instructions on accepting IB credit, please visit our website (http://dars.tamu.edu).

SAT Subject TestsCredits are offered to entering freshmen who score high on the SATSubject Tests. High school students who are interested in taking thesetests should contact their school counselors or write College Board ATP,Box 592, Princeton, NJ 08541.

Subject Test Minimum ScoreRequired

Texas A&MCourse(s)

Credit Hours

Chemistry 630 CHEM 101/CHEM 111

4

French 640 FREN 101 4740 FREN 101,

FREN 1028

German 630 GERM 101 4740 GERM 101,

GERM 1028

Italian 630 ITAL 101 4750 ITAL 101,

ITAL 1028

Latin 630 CLAS 121 4730 CLAS 121,

CLAS 1228

Physics 680 PHYS 201,PHYS 202

8

Spanish 630 SPAN 101 4750 SPAN 101,

SPAN 1028

The minimum score required is based on the recentered scale. Studentswho took tests before April 1, 1995, should contact Testing Services todetermine the minimum score required. For instructions on acceptingSAT Subject credit, please visit our website (http://dars.tamu.edu).

Departmental Examinations for Entering Freshmen andCurrently Enrolled StudentsQualified entering freshmen may take departmental tests after beingofficially admitted into Texas A&M University. Currently enrolled studentscan also take the exams throughout the year. Contact Testing Services(http://dars.tamu.edu) for registration information. The tests are

Page 29: admissions@tamu.edu or Coalition Application. …catalog.tamu.edu/undergraduate/general-information/...Texas A&M University 109 John J. Koldus Building 1265 TAMU College Station, TX

Admission           29

prepared by participating Texas A&M departments. Current offeringsinclude:

Code Title Semester CreditHours

CHEM 101& CHEM 102

Fundamentals of Chemistry Iand Fundamentals of Chemistry II

6

CSCE 110 Programming I 4MATH 102 Algebra (Available to entering

freshman only during the summerbefore beginning classes at TexasA&M)

3

MATH 131 Mathematical Concepts—Calculus(Available to entering freshmanonly during the summer beforebeginning classes at Texas A&M)

3

MATH 141 Finite Mathematics (Available toentering freshman only during thesummer before beginning classesat Texas A&M)

3

MATH 142 Business Calculus (Available toentering freshman only during thesummer before beginning classesat Texas A&M)

3

MATH 151 Engineering Mathematics I(Available to entering freshmanonly during the summer beforebeginning classes at Texas A&M)

4

MATH 152 Engineering Mathematics II(Available to entering freshmanonly during the summer beforebeginning classes at Texas A&M)

4

MATH 166 Topics in ContemporaryMathematics II (Available toentering freshman only during thesummer before beginning classesat Texas A&M)

3

MATH 171 Analytic Geometry and Calculus(Available to entering freshmanonly during the summer beforebeginning classes at Texas A&M)

4

MATH 172 Calculus (Available to enteringfreshman only during the summerbefore beginning classes at TexasA&M)

4

MATH 251 Engineering Mathematics III(Available to entering freshmanonly during the summer beforebeginning classes at Texas A&M)

3

PHYS 201 College Physics 4PHYS 202 College Physics 4PHYS 208 Electricity and Optics 4PHYS 218 Mechanics 4POLS 206 American National Government 3POLS 207 State and Local Government 3

Graduate Admission

Graduate AdmissionFor information or applications for graduate admission, please contact:

Office of Graduate AdmissionsTexas A&M UniversityP. O. Box 40001College Station, TX 77842-4001(979) [email protected]://admissions.tamu.edu/graduate

Please reference the Texas A&M University Graduate and ProfessionalCatalog on this website.