What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? Indiana
I'm a student at a university and originally came to the school to do engineering. My interests changed and so I started the process to change my degree objective towards management. Over a period of 2 semesters, I met with the management advisors probably 2 times each semester, to make sure I was taking the right classes and was on track to be officially accepted into the management college. After going through everything, I do meet all the requirements.
The issue is that one of the requirements can be interpreted in two different ways and the past advisors told me I was just fine. The person who determines if you're accepted or not is saying that I'm not because their interpretation was different.
Problem: I took a year of my life (2 semesters, Spring and Fall) to take the right courses so I could change my degree objective. Now that I meet all the requirements based on the advice given by the advisors in the past, they're telling me I don't because they apparently are interpreting it differently. This places me in a tough situation because if I can't get into this college within the university, then I've wasted a lot of time and a LOT of effort. The tuition was lost as well, but that is a very minor part for me because the value of the classes and effort I was putting in was worth a lot more to me.
Any advice is appreciated. I plan to speak more with the advisors, specifically the ones I met with in the past, and hope that they'll solve it for me.
However, if they don't, what route do I take? Get a lawyer to help fight it? My question then, is that what will the lawyer get me? I'm honestly not interested in the money, I just want to be accepted and move on - I've taken the right classes, I have the right GPA, etc.
I'm a student at a university and originally came to the school to do engineering. My interests changed and so I started the process to change my degree objective towards management. Over a period of 2 semesters, I met with the management advisors probably 2 times each semester, to make sure I was taking the right classes and was on track to be officially accepted into the management college. After going through everything, I do meet all the requirements.
The issue is that one of the requirements can be interpreted in two different ways and the past advisors told me I was just fine. The person who determines if you're accepted or not is saying that I'm not because their interpretation was different.
Problem: I took a year of my life (2 semesters, Spring and Fall) to take the right courses so I could change my degree objective. Now that I meet all the requirements based on the advice given by the advisors in the past, they're telling me I don't because they apparently are interpreting it differently. This places me in a tough situation because if I can't get into this college within the university, then I've wasted a lot of time and a LOT of effort. The tuition was lost as well, but that is a very minor part for me because the value of the classes and effort I was putting in was worth a lot more to me.
Any advice is appreciated. I plan to speak more with the advisors, specifically the ones I met with in the past, and hope that they'll solve it for me.
However, if they don't, what route do I take? Get a lawyer to help fight it? My question then, is that what will the lawyer get me? I'm honestly not interested in the money, I just want to be accepted and move on - I've taken the right classes, I have the right GPA, etc.