To apply to a graduate degree program, you should have completed a bachelor's degree or be completing a bachelor's degree prior to enrollment and have a 3.0 or higher cumulative grade point average in all undergraduate work.
Students who have less than a 2.5 GPA may be admitted under certain conditions. It's possible they may be required to submit additional documentation, such as the Graduate Record Examination, Graduate Management Admissions Test, or Miller's Analogies Test results; a resume of relevant work experience; or letters of recommendation.
Students with a CGPA less than 2.5 but with a 3.0 GPA in their last 60 hours of undergraduate work will also be given additional consideration.
Some programs, such as computer science and electrical engineering, require specific undergraduate course work.
For online courses, you'll need specific computer equipment.
The provisional status enables students whose undergraduate CGPA is between 2.5 and 3.0 to enroll for nine credit hours of graduate course work. Upon completion of these credit hours with a 3.0 or better, provisional students will be reconsidered for full acceptance. If provisional students do not meet the 3.0 CGPA requirement after nine credits, they will be dismissed.
Decision Pending enables students who are missing official documents to register for a maximum of two classes (up to eight credits) while the application decision is pending. You must maintain a minimum GPA of 3.0. Once your application package is complete and reviewed, you'll be considered for full admission. Decision-pending students whose Capitol College CGPA falls below 3.0 will be denied admission to the College.