Since Industry Credential Programs are comprehensive and not modular, students are expected to start and complete a program within the scheduled timeframe. If a student withdraws or is terminated from a program and wishes to return, he will need to wait until a new start date to reapply. Students who notified the Adult Career Center prior to exiting or were terminated due to academic or attendance requirements and have a zero-account balance are permitted to reapply to the same program one time. The student will apply for enrollment in the program in its entirety, previous hours and course work completed will not carryover. Application approval will be at the discretion of the ACC Director. Depending on the timeframe and SAP at the time of withdrawal, financial aid may not be available. The student may need to renew their FAFSA to determine Title IV eligibility. Students that reapply may be eligible for the school’s interest-free payment plan only in the event the student’s past payment history shows payments were made on-time and in-full. If a student did not make on-time, in-full payments the student is not eligible for a school payment plan.
Students that exited without notification prior to withdrawing or were terminated for Code of Conduct/Security violations are not permitted to enroll in any program or class at MCCTC Adult Career Center.
Practical Nursing Readmission
The student must complete the curriculum within 66 weeks (full-time) or 132 weeks (part-time) of initial instruction, including any readmissions. The student will be readmitted into the beginning of the quarter in which they were dismissed and must repeat all the coursework, lab and clinical for the entire quarter.
In order to be considered for readmission:
- Must achieve an 78% on a comprehensive exam that includes information from the quarters/courses successfully completed
- Must achieve a satisfactory on clinical comprehensive skills validation
- Must sign and send letter of agreement with readmission fee by deadline (see below)
- Must pay any outstanding balances before readmission or enrollment
- If unsuccessful or chooses not to take comprehensive exam:
- Can restart the program after 180 days with the next cohort start
- Must follow all enrollment criteria
A student may exit and return to the program once with the next enrolling cohort. If a student withdraws or is dismissed again, they will have to wait a year from the time of dismissal/withdrawal to reapply to the program. They then may enroll with the next enrolling cohort. All current admission criteria apply. Placement is not guaranteed, it will be determined by seats available.
The student is financially responsible for maintaining current healthcare provider cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) certification, immunizations, a two-step Mantoux tuberculosis test, and criminal background check.
The returning student will be responsible for the nonrefundable $50.00 readmission fee. The student is responsible for tuition, lab and supply fees for any portion of the pay period not yet successfully completed. The student will abide by the current Catalog/Student Handbook for the class which they are being readmitted. This includes maintaining 90% attendance. Student will be sent a letter of agreement which must be signed and returned to the school along with the $50 readmission fee by the deadline specified for readmission and class placement.
A student seeking federal financial aid may repeat coursework they failed or did not complete. However, for students repeating coursework, they must complete the program within the maximum time frame allowed.
The student who drops out and returns to school must first have their financial aid reviewed if they received financial aid funds during their previous enrollment. Students who return within 180 days will be considered in the same payment period they were in when they left school. Students will have to complete the hours remaining in the payment period for which they were previously paid before an additional payment of Pell Grant funds will be made. If it is determined that funds were returned under the Federal “Return to Title IV Policy” for a payment period that the student must complete upon returning to school, these funds will be re-requested. The school must also cancel any overpayments assessed the student as a result of the prior withdrawal.
Students returning after 180 days will be considered in a new payment period and will be eligible to receive additional funds as a new student up to the award year limit. If the school gives the student credit for hours previously attended, the school will treat the hours remaining in the program as if they are the student’s entire program. For example: A student withdraws after completing 250 hours of a 900-hour program. If the student returns after 180 days and receives credit for the completed hours, the student will be paid for the remaining 650 hours as an advanced standing student. However, if the student is repeating the entire program, the student may be paid for the entire program up to the award year limits.