Admission to Candidacy
A student must apply for candidacy to the Graduate School for an M.S. degree in Museum and Field Studies. The student must file an application form, along with a diploma card, to the Graduate School's office at least 10 weeks prior to the completion of the defense of the thesis or project.
Appeal Process
Every graduate student has the right to appeal actions taken by faculty, committees of the faculty, or administrative officers of the Museum. Such appeals should be restricted to those cases where it can be demonstrated that the student has not been fairly treated in accordance with the graduate rules of the Museum and Field Studies Program. Letters of appeal should be addressed to the Director of the Museum and should explicitly state the reasons for the appeal, along with corroborative documentation.
Grade Appeals
University of Colorado Museun & Field Studies Graduate Program Policy on Grade Appeals
One of the fundamental responsibilities of every faculty member in the Museum and Field Studies Graduate Program is to evaluate the academic performance of our students fairly and conscientiously. The grades our students earn form part of their permanent academic records, and can have far-reaching impacts on their future success in a variety of endeavors. As individual faculty members, and collectively as a Museum, it is our duty to ensure that these grades are an accurate assessment of performance.
We take the prerogative of faculty members to assign grades very seriously, and we are extremely reluctant to interfere in this basic aspect of our academic lives. At the same time, both the courts and the AAUP have recognized the need for a well-designed appeals process to provide remedies on those rare occasions when grades are assigned in an arbitrary or capricious manner, or when grading is improperly influenced by prejudice or emotion.
Human Subjects Review
All Museum and Field Studies research projects leading to a thesis or project that involve living human beings must be cleared by the Human Subjects Review Committee. If the Graduate School determines that proper review procedures were not followed, it will not accept a thesis regardless of its scholarly or scientific content. Human Subjects Review is sometimes a lengthy process and students are urged to begin that process well in advance of their research.
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