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Section 5.14
COLLEGE APPROVAL OF 300 AND 400 LEVEL COURSES AT FIRELANDS COLLEGE
Guidelines for Department Chairs/School Directors
Firelands
College, as a regional campus of Bowling Green State University,
awards a number of two-year associate degrees, offers the first two
years of many main campus programs, and is capable of providing the
site for selected baccalaureate degree programs (offered by main
campus departments). Therefore the content of most courses which are
taught at Firelands is the same as those taught at the main campus.
The departments at Firelands have responsibility for annual
evaluation of its faculty. But main campus departments are consulted
at critical points regarding the Firelands faculty and upper division
course offerings.
First, when a faculty member is hired at Firelands College, the
appropriate main campus department chair certifies the Firelands
faculty member's qualifications to teach specific upper division
courses. If at a later time Firelands proposes that that faculty
member teach a 300 or 400 level course for which he or she has not
been certified, the main campus department is again consulted
regarding the Firelands faculty member's credentials to teach that
course.
Second, every two years the dean of Firelands College submits
lists of upper division courses to the appropriate main campus deans,
along with a rationale of the need for that course at Firelands. This
list is divided into three parts: a) courses which are parts of
degree programs offered at Firelands, b) courses which have been
taught previously at Firelands, and c) new listings. The college
deans, in turn, consult with main campus department chairs regarding
these lists.
In assessing the appropriateness or inappropriateness of having a
course offered at Firelands, department chairs should base their
decision on the following criteria. If one or more of the following
criteria are met, the course would normally be approved.
- The course is part of an associate degree program offered by
Firelands College.
- The course is part of a baccalaureate degree program offered
at Firelands by a main campus college.
- Freshmen and sophomores enroll in the course at the main
campus.
- The course is offered at other 2 year campuses (branch
campuses, community colleges, or technical colleges) as a lower
division course and is allowed to transfer into Bowling Green as
an upper division course.
- The field is an area of expertise of the Firelands faculty
member (as certified initially by the main campus
department).
- The course fulfills a General Education requirement in one or
more colleges of the university.
- The course must be taken by students by the end of their
second year if they are to matriculate successfully into the
junior year of a program at main campus.
- There is a demand from Firelands College students or by the
local community for a specific course.
If criterion #1 or #2 is the basis for the Firelands request, the
approval is routine and is essentially a matter of information to
chairs. We cannot challenge the offering of courses which have
already been approved by the university when the degree program was
authorized to be offered at the Firelands campus.
Chairs should focus primarily on courses which have not been
offered before at Firelands. If approval to offer a 300 or 400 level
course is denied, please be specific in your rationale for that
denial. If the course to be offered at Firelands is acceptable, but
the faculty member listed has never been approved by your department,
you may approve the course contingent upon Firelands College
finding a faculty member with the appropriate credentials to teach
the course. That faculty member must be approved by the main campus
department.
As a point of clarification to new chairs, Firelands College does
not and cannot offer four year degree programs. Two year campuses are
prevented by Ohio law from awarding baccalaureate degrees. And
several structural arrangements prevent students from being able to
complete their degree programs at Firelands College. First, the
Firelands curriculum does not allow more than 20% of its course
offerings at the 300 and 400 level in any given year. Secondly,
unless special arrangements are made, individual Firelands faculty
members teach no more than four upper division courses in a two year
period. Most teach fewer than that.
Four-year degree programs are available at Firelands only if main
campus colleges and departments choose to make their programs
available there (in order to reach adult students who are unable to
commute.) Firelands College is willing to cooperate with any college,
department, or program which would like to expand its clientele.
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