Bachelor’s degrees adding number of credit hours required
March 12, 2010
Students may have
difficulty graduating
in four years
Students hoping to complete
their bachelor ’s degree in four
years may have to start taking a
closer look at their major’s degree
requirements prior to enrollment.
Students hoping to complete
their bachelor ’s degree in four
years may have to start taking a
closer look at their major’s degree
requirements prior to enrollment.
A typical bachelor’s degree
should require 121 credit hours over
the course of four years, yet several
of Kent State’s programs have far
exceeded this standard, said Robert
Frank, provost and senior vice
president of academic affairs.
“We’ve had sort of degree
creep over the years where people
add more and more and more
into degrees, and employers sort
of give us mixed messages,” Frank
said. “They want our graduates to
have more, but on the other hand
they want graduates to come out
with more work-ready skills, so
you get caught up in how to best
prepare people.”
This means that many students
cannot graduate in the allotted four
years, typically having to complete
the left-over credit hours during a
fifth year.
“Students may not really realize
what going 20 or 40 hours more
means in their lives,” Frank said.
“They may not realize until junior
or senior years.”
Therese Tillett, director of curriculum
services, said, “Ideally, a fulltime
enrolled student should get by
by taking 15 credits per semester
plus an orientation course.”
Mohammed Alsawaha, freshman
English as a second language
major, said while he is changing his
major to business administration in
Fall 2010, he plans to take 15 credit
hours per semester.
Alsawaha said if it comes down
to having many credit hours during
his last two years, he will do
whatever it takes to graduate in
four years.
Alsawaha said he would rather
“load up on credits in his fourth year
than take a fifth year of classes.”
Reasons
Tillett said the education and
nursing departments tend to have
degrees with high credit hour
requirements.
“Licensure or state requirements
change every few years, and
I think there is a history of changing
the program to add courses
without checking to see what can be removed,” Tillett said. “The
College of Nursing is very good at
looking at their own program and
incorporating content into already
existing courses.”
Tillett said another possible reason
for the high credit requirements
in these departments is “because
of their accreditation and state
requirements for teacher licensure
and with some of these majors,
sometimes the student will specialize
in two areas and they will have
to take content in both areas.”
Tillett added that fortunately
for education students, some of
these high credit hour requirements
can be counted toward their
master’s degree when they come
to complete it.
When Katelyn Regan, sophomore
integrated language arts
major, changed to her major from
business her freshman year, she
wasn’t fully aware of how much
she would have to do each semester
to graduate in four years.
“I was led to believe I could
get out in four years,” Regan said.
“That would be if I did my student
teaching in Spring 2012.”
Regan said she hopes to ideally
graduate in four years and wants to
begin teaching immediately upon
graduation.
Cynthia Symons, professor in
health education and promotion,
said while the credit hour requirements
look daunting on paper, there
is a very good explanation for this
that many students don’t realize.
For example, students working
to earn a degree in school health and
physical education can have to take
up to 167 credit hours to graduate
— taking them well into a fifth year
of classes. This is because a program
like this is technically a dual major:
one in school health and one in
physical education.
However, by taking a fifth year,
students will graduate with two
full majors and two full licensures
in Ohio, Symons said.
“That accounts for the additional
credit hours,” Symons said. “The
licenses are split and you can get
one or the other, or you can load up
and get both.”
Symons said the fifth year of
additional credits is very beneficial
to students in the education field.
“In terms of increasing their
marketability, anytime a teacher can
have licenses or credentials in more
than one area, the more marketable
they are,” she said.
If students choose to get both
licensures, some of those hours
can be taken over the summer, said
Ralph Lorenz, interim associate
dean of the College of the Arts.
“Of course you can take extra
courses during the summer, but it’s
not generally assumed that students
have to take courses during summer,”
Lorenz said.
If a program is 132 hours or
more, the department has to decide
whether to cut back hours or advertise
as more than a four-year program,
Frank added.
“Degrees are constantly pressured
to justify why they aren’t at the typical
120 national average,” Frank said.
“Both at a national and international
level, there is a push for a bachelor’s
degree to be as efficient as possible.”
Lorenz said overall, colleges
have to realize that it’s all about
“finding the right balance.”
“There is always something to
be said for the additional knowledge
you take up,” Lorenz added.
“There is always a trade-off between
efficiency and picking up a highly
developed set of skills.”
Contact academics reporter Suzi
Starheim at [email protected].