The Graduate School Manual - Admissions

An application fee of $75 is required from all applicants at the time of application submission. Fees cannot be deferred or waived, except for CSTEP, EOP, HEOP, LSAMP Program, Project 1000, SEEK Program or TRIO Program (McNair Scholars Program, Student Support Services, Upward Bound, etc.) students, GEM Fellowship applicants, and United States Armed Forces veterans and active duty service members. Applications will not be reviewed until the fee is paid and the application is submitted. Some academic departments are able to grant application fee waivers as well. If you do not belong to any of the groups above, please review your department’s webpage for any fee waiver eligibility information. If you still have questions, or if this information is not available, we recommend you reach out to your academic department. Students applying to multiple programs must submit $75 for each program. Application fees are non-refundable and non-transferable. Costs may be different for PharmD applications, which are submitted through the Pharmacy College Application Service (PharmCAS).

Academic Test Scores

The Office of Graduate Recruitment and Admissions requires submission of test scores from the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) (in-person or at-home) or other appropriate standardized national exams (e.g., GMAT, PCAT, Miller Analogies). These standardized exams are indicators of how well an applicant can handle graduate coursework.

GRE scores are required for most programs in the Harpur College of Arts and Sciences and the Thomas J. Watson College of Engineering and Applied Science. Some programs may allow students to substitute GMAT scores for GRE scores. Students must submit scores from an exam taken within the last 5 years, as the testing agency considers only scores less than 5 years old to be valid. Departments who require the GRE Subject Test generally specify this on their websites. Applicants for admission to the School of Management should submit GMAT scores. Applicants for admission to the PharmD program in the School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences should submit PCAT scores.

Departments/programs that want to waive test scores for individual applicants should request a waiver from the Office of Graduate Recruitment and Admissions and provide appropriate rationale for the waiver (e.g., applicant has already taken graduate courses and done well, thus demonstrating the ability to handle graduate coursework).

Application Deadlines

Application deadlines vary by program and across fall and spring semesters. The Graduate School's online program descriptions provide the specific deadlines for each program. Program staff members should contact the Office of Graduate Recruitment and Admissions to provide or update the precise deadlines for their programs.

Types of Admission: Degree Programs

Applicants admitted as degree (matriculated) students may be placed in one of the following categories:

Regular admission: Students are admitted as fully qualified to undertake a program towards a graduate degree. Students who are expected to receive their bachelor's degrees with satisfactory academic achievement between the time of admission and the time they begin their graduate studies are included in this category. Students under regular admission who do not submit official, final transcripts showing satisfactory academic achievement and degree conferral before the end of the sixth week of graduate studies will not be allowed to register for subsequent semesters until they submit such documentation.

Provisional admission: An applicant whose credentials are incomplete may be admitted provisionally. (Normally, an applicant will not be provisionally admitted if more than one of the required credentials is missing.) Once the missing documentation is received, it will be reviewed by the graduate program and the Office of Graduate Recruitment and Admissions. If approved by both, the status will be changed to a regular admit by the Office of Graduate Recruitment and Admissions. All missing documentation should be submitted before the student initially enrolls. For unusual circumstances and with approval by the Office of Graduate Recruitment and Admissions, the missing documentation may be submitted during the student's first semester. Students under provisional admission will not be allowed to register for subsequent semesters or graduate until they have provided specific documentation and their status has been changed to "regular."

Conditional admission: Students who do not meet academic requirements for admission, as determined by the graduate program and the Office of Graduate Recruitment and Admissions, may be admitted conditionally, with the Office of Graduate Recruitment and Admissions' approval. The Office of Graduate Recruitment and Admissions will not approve a recommendation of conditional admit if the applicant's credentials are incomplete. Graduate programs may recommend admittance and the conditions. It is expected that specific conditions for admission to regular status beginning in the second semester, and a timetable for fulfilling those conditions, will be communicated in writing by the program to the student at the time of conditional admission. Normally a student can only be a "conditional admit" for the first semester. After the first semester, the program will review the student's progress toward satisfying those conditions. If they are not met, the program will recommend appropriate action by the Office of Graduate Recruitment and Admissions. Per federal regulations, international students cannot be granted conditional admission.

Deferral of Admission

An offer of admission applies to a particular starting semester. This is specified in the acceptance letter. An applicant who wishes to defer admission should contact their graduate program. If the applicant has completed additional coursework since submitting their graduate application, they must submit a new transcript for review.

If the graduate program approves an applicant's deferral, the program should submit an admission deferral request to the Office of Graduate Recruitment and Admissions, who will process the request.

International Students: If difficulty in obtaining a visa prevents an international applicant from enrolling in the semester specified in the acceptance letter, the applicant should contact the graduate program directly. The graduate program will then advise the Office of Graduate Recruitment and Admissions of the applicant's status.

Accelerated Degree Deferral of Admission

Accelerated graduate degree programs are designed to begin the semester following graduation with an undergraduate degree. If an accelerated degree student wishes to begin studies at a later semester, the student should contact their graduate program to request a deferral of admission for up to one year. If the graduate program approves the student’s deferral, the program submits an admission deferral request to The Office of Graduate Recruitment and Admissions (OGRA).

Accelerated degree students who wish to defer for more than one year or who do not have prior OGRA approval to defer must reapply for admission to a non-accelerated graduate program. It is not possible to reapply to an accelerated program. Readmitted students lose the ability to apply courses taken during their undergraduate degree toward their graduate degree and must meet the 24 credit residency requirement.

Dual/Double-Degree Programs

Applicants to dual-degree or double-degree programs should apply to both degree programs at the same time by submitting two graduate applications and paying two application fees. Both academic departments must recommend the applicant for admission to the dual-degree program. The Office of Graduate Recruitment and Admissions renders the final admission decision. If the student later decides to withdraw from one of the programs, the student is required to notify both academic departments and the Office of Graduate Recruitment and Admissions immediately in writing.

Students are expected to be registered as full-time students every semester and complete the dual-degree program as prescribed by the program. The only exception to full-time registration is for students in the MS Nursing program who are employed full-time, and this exception is noted upon admission. In this case, students are expected to be registered every semester and complete the dual-degree program as prescribed by the program. In all cases, students are expected to maintain continuous registration for the fall and spring semesters and complete the dual-degree program within five years of entering the program. Students are not allowed to be registered in a dual-degree or double-degree program of study and an online program simultaneously.

Only under special circumstances will a student be admitted to a dual-degree program after the student has started the first semester of one of the component degree programs. When applying for the dual-degree program, the student must present a course schedule for every semester and have the schedule approved by both academic departments. The course schedule should meet the timeline prescribed by the dual-degree program. The Office of Graduate Recruitment and Admissions will render a final admission decision. If the student is admitted to the second degree program, enrollment in that program will not begin until the subsequent semester.

Admission: Non-Degree/Non-Matriculated Status

Persons holding a baccalaureate degree may apply to enroll in graduate courses without entering a degree or certificate program. This is known as non-degree/non-matriculated student status and is sometimes referred to as "continuing education." Applicants for non-matriculated student status must follow the Office of Graduate Recruitment and Admissions' non-degree application process.

Non-matriculated students may take up to 12 credits total, though some academic departments and schools limit that number further. Academic departments and schools may also restrict enrollment in their courses to degree- and certificate-seeking matriculated students. Degrees, certificates and graduate assistantships are not granted to non-matriculated students. Students who wish to take more than 12 credits as a non-degree/non-matriculated student must submit the Lifelong Learner Contract to register for additional courses.

Depending on the curriculum requirements of a program, some courses taken as a non-degree student may be applied toward a degree, should the student later gain admission to a Binghamton University graduate degree or certificate program. The maximum number of credits taken as a non-degree student that can be applied toward a degree is 12 and toward a certificate is 8. Whether non-degree credits will be applied toward a degree or certificate is determined at the time of admission to a degree or certificate program. Non-matriculated credits will not be applied toward a degree or certificate once the student has begun the degree or certificate program. If, at a later date, a student decides to apply to the Office of Graduate Recruitment and Admissions for admission to a degree program, the student must submit a regular application electronically. If the student is admitted to a degree program, s/he should obtain from the department an evaluation of graduate courses taken on a continuing education basis as a non-matriculated student. Through this evaluation, those courses that are found appropriate may be officially credited toward the student's degree.

If a non-matriculated student seeks admission to a degree or certificate program with the intention of applying some of the student's non-matriculated course credits to the degree or certificate, then it is the student's responsibility to apply to the degree or certificate program in a timely way. For example, application and admission to a degree program should occur before the 12-credit limit is reached. At most, 12 non-matriculated credits will be applied to the degree program and 8 credits to the certificate program.

Non-matriculated credits applied to a degree program can also be applied toward the university residency requirement.

Materials Needed for Consideration for Admission to Degree Programs

To be eligible for graduate study, applicants must:

Have earned, at minimum, one of the following:

Exception: Applicants for the PharmD program in the School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences (SOPPS) must meet the requirements listed in the SOPPS section of the Bulletin. Applicants must have completed certain courses and must have, at minimum, a 2.75 GPA.

All applicants must submit: