Double Majors
A student who wishes to complete full majors in two areas of study indicates one as the primary major, which determines the degree (B.A., B.F.A., B.Mus., B.S.N., or B.S.). Both majors will be noted on the transcript. Courses in each major must be independent of each other; students may not "double dip" one course between two majors, or between any major and a minor. Note that a co-requisite course for a major is not considered a course "in the major;" therefore, a course that is a co-requisite for one major can count in a second major for that student. For example, Biology majors must complete Chem113 as a co-requisite course. Chem 113 does not count towards the biology major, but that student can use Chem 113 towards a chemistry major or minor. Corequisite courses are not part of the major and, therefore, can be count toward meeting the requirements of the major or minor.
Double Degrees (Undergraduate)
Students who wish to earn multiple baccalaureate degrees from Â鶹¹û¶³ must complete multiple majors (one major per degree awarded), all requirements of the Learning in Common program (excepting Add-Venture students), and at least eight additional course units beyond the first degree for each additional degree. For example, a student wishing to earn two undergraduate degrees must complete at least 40 units; a student wishing to earn three undergraduate degrees must complete at least 48 units. (For students entering Â鶹¹û¶³ in the Fall 2024 term or beyond, a student wishing to earn two undergraduate degrees must complete at least 38 units; a student wishing to earn three undergraduate degrees must complete at least 46 units.)
Double Degrees (Graduate)
Students who have earned a graduate degree from Â鶹¹û¶³ are invited to pursue a second graduate degree from the institution. Students must apply for admission to the new degree program, and fulfill all requirements of that degree program. The program director of the second degree will determine if credits from the previous degree may be applied to the new program; up to a maximum of 50% of those credits may apply the new degree program. Students who are simultaneously enrolled in two master's programs may count courses towards both degrees, as long as at least 50% of the courses in each degree program is completed independently of the other.
Some external accrediting bodies may have policies on transfer and sharing of credits between degree programs. Where these policies are more stringent or specific than the Â鶹¹û¶³ policy stated above, the accreditation policies take precedence.
Students must complete the double degree within seven years of the first course in the program; exceptions on the time limit may be granted by the appropriate graduate program director. Students who have already completed a master's degree at Â鶹¹û¶³ who wish to use this policy towards a second master's degree must have earned the first degree within three years of applying to the second degree program; exceptions on the time limit may be granted by the appropriate graduate program director.