Attendance, Illness and Medical Absence
There is no general faculty rule covering attendance at classes, laboratory periods, etc. This matter is left to the individual instructor, who may or may not view irregularities in attendance as serious enough to affect the student's grade. The responsibility to follow the instructor's policies is clearly the student's.
Instructors are urged to inform the Center for Academic Support when, in their view, a given student's attendance record may affect his or her work adversely. In this way, The College will be alerted to a pattern of serious absence.
Students are urged to inform the Office of the Dean of Students when an illness causes them to return home for a significant length of time, or when they are hospitalized or called home due to a family emergency or death. Instructors will be notified when appropriate and at the student's request.
The make-up work missed through absence is a matter left to the discretion of an instructor. Whether it will be permitted at all, or what penalty will be assigned, is up to the instructor. Two points should be made:
- The University Health Service (UHS) does not provide retroactive excuses for missed classes. Students who are seen at UHS for an illness or injury can ask for documentation that verifies the date of the student 's visit(s) to UHS without mention of the reason for the visit. If the student 's UHS provider determines the student should curtail activities in the coming days or weeks, the provider will give the student written instructions with specific recommendations. Documentation cannot be provided to students who were not seen at UHS for their illness or injury. Students are encouraged to make every effort to resolve health-related absences and issues by talking with the faculty directly.
- Students wishing to consider "inactive status" as a result of an extended or severe illness may discuss that request with an adviser in the Center for Academic Support, where a Medical Information Request form may be completed and forwarded to the University Health Service. (See Inactive Status.)
Go back to the Adviser's Handbook Index