quincy
Senior Member
With the master's programs in education that I have checked in Michigan, once you are enrolled in the program, you must be enrolled every academic year unless you are granted a leave of absence. Without a leave of absence, you are, essentially, withdrawing from school and withdrawing from the program. The school is not going to track down people who are not enrolled in the university to notify them of changes.Received an email from the dean a short time ago. His exact words were "Although letters were sent to each student in the program, we were unable to locate your letter in your file. I was not in this position at the time, so I cannot say with certainty what happened at that time." Seems that I am being to held to something they aren't even sure they notified me about.
Lets say somehow I was overlooked or didn't receive the letter, am I obligated to call each semester, check in? I know what I agreed to which was 7 years. Anything beyond that is my fault.
Lets say I did receive the letter but could not adjust to their new time frame? I guess what I am getting at is, the catalog spells out the guidelines and what I view is our contract. I provide money and SVSU provides the education. When they accepted payment and I took the classes, the agreement was that credits are good for 7 years and I must complete the program within that time frame. Regardless of notification, can the agreement be changed? I guess this could be in the catalog but no one from the university will answer that question or tell me where that is even addressed.
To me that is like buying a car with a 5 year loan then bank realizes they don't want to do car loans anymore and 2 years into the loan send a letter saying I have 1 year to complete repayment. Regardless of whether they notify me or not, that's not what we agreed to.
When you quit the program as you did, you must then reapply not only to the university but also be readmitted to the program. The university is under no obligation to readmit you to a program you quit.
If you reapplied and were readmitted, the program you were readmitted to is a different program than the one you originally enrolled in six years ago. Whatever agreement you made with the university six years ago no longer applies.