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Undergraduate Programs:
Policies and Procedures Declaring a Major in Chemistry You must declare your major by the beginning of your junior year. You declare your major in Axess, and the declaration is then approved by the department. Monitor Axess for this approval. The Chemistry Undergraduate Advising Office is in Mudd 121A, x3-1525. Selecting an Advisor With the help of the Student Services Manager, every chemistry major must select an advisor. If you are doing research, or have received a fellowship to do research over the summer, your research advisor automatically becomes your academic advisor also. If you are not doing research, you may ask any faculty member in the department to serve as your advisor. Phone or email the faculty member to set a meeting time to discuss his/her being your academic advisor. After this meeting, advise the chemistry Undergraduate Advising Office (Mudd 121A, x3-1525) of the name of your academic advisor. Be sure to meet regularly with your advisor to keep him/her informed of your progress, achievements, career interests, etc. Take the initiative in arranging these meetings if necessary. Remember, your advisor needs to know something about you to be able to write that recommendation you need come senior year. Transferring Credits Credit earned at another institution, whether during summer school or full-time attendance, can be used to meet various Stanford requirements: a) the unit requirement for graduation, b) the general University requirements (writing, distribution, language), and c) the major department requirements. Approval procedures for transfer credit depend on the type of requirement to be fulfilled. a) Graduation Requirements b) General University Requirements c) Department Requirements Summer School - Chemistry students planning to take coursework at another institution during the summer are strongly encouraged to determine in advance whether the courses meet chemistry requirements. Show the summer catalog describing the courses to be taken to the chair of the Chemistry Undergraduate Study Committee. Because of the Stanford quarter system and the integrated core program in chemistry, courses at other institutions aren't always equivalent to Stanford chemistry courses in content and units. Be sure to have the transfer credits approved officially after you actually take the course. For further information on transfer credit, see the Stanford Bulletin. |
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