Descriptive and inferential statistics for prediction and decision making, with managerial and economic applications. Includes probability theory and distributions, hypothesis testing, and regression analysis.
One can repeat any UNLV course once at UNLV and have the original grade removed from your GPA. Courses that are initially taken at UNLV must be repeated at UNLV in order to have the initial grade removed from the computation of the GPA.
In order to audit a class, students need to contact the Office of the Registrar. Changing Credit to Audit: Students may change from credit to audit until the end of the drop period for a class. (Note that different classes may have different drop deadlines.)
Declaring or changing a major is not a difficult process. Simply visit the advising center of choice for details concerning the academic requirements for individual majors, and you are on your way.
For admissions purposes, credits do not expire, and all earned credits will be evaluated. Nontraditional credits, including but not limited to AP (Advanced Placement), CLEP, and Dantes, may be applied toward your degree, although nongraded credits will not count toward the transferable total for admission.
The grade of S, as well as grades of D- and above on the letter grade scale are considered passing.
Auditing a Class Auditing allows a student to continue attending a course, but no grade or credit is awarded. Once audited, a course cannot be changed back to credit unless it is before the end of the add/drop period for that term.
Auditing a Class Auditing allows you to continue attending a class, but you will not earn a grade or credit for the class. Once you audit a course you cannot change it back* to credit unless it is before the end of the add/drop period for the term.
While withdrawing from a class completely eliminates the course from the student's schedule, an audit, he tells students, “is kind of a placeholder.” “An audit was designed so students would be seeing that material, so the next time they took that course, they would make higher in that course,” Stinnett said.
You can complete a dual major (more than one course of study) by completing the requirements for each major. At graduation time, you will have both majors listed on one diploma (example: Bachelor of Arts, Communication, and Sociology).
Catalog Year is the academic year for which a degree candidate must meet documented graduation requirements. University graduation requirements and each academic program's curricular (major, minor, or certificate) requirements are officially documented in the GA (General Announcements) .
Unsuccessful degree program progression is indicated by a failure to: maintain a minimum degree GPA of 3.0. earn satisfactory grades (including no more than two incompletes, no grades below a B, or no repeated withdrawals from courses required for the degree program)