Sep 17, 2024  
2024-2025 Catalog 
    
2024-2025 Catalog

Accelerated Options

Location(s): On Campus, Online


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3+3 Law Program with Mercer University Law School


Advisor: Dr. Nicholas Steneck

Career Description

A Juris Doctor (J.D.) leads to a broad range of careers that impact people’s lives. Lawyers help with buying homes, writing wills, prosecuting and defending criminals, creating business contracts, and attempting to protect people from litigation. A law degree may also open up law-related careers in government, business, higher education, health care, communication, and numerous other fields. Legal practice is intellectually challenging and requires the use of ethics, reasoning and judgment. To practice law, students must typically complete an undergraduate degree, earn a Juris Doctor (JD) diploma from an accredited law school and pass their state’s bar examination

3 + 3 Program Description

Mercer University School of Law and Wesleyan College recognize that certain students have the ability and readiness to complete their undergraduate education and their law degree training in less than the normally required seven years of study. The 3 + 3 program provides an opportunity for select students to accelerate their course of study by completing both an undergraduate degree (from Wesleyan) and the Juris Doctor degree (from Mercer University) in approximately six years of full time study. Students enrolled in this program are expected to complete all Wesleyan College core requirements, including requirements of their chosen major, with a minimum of two and a half years in residence and at least 90 credit hours at Wesleyan prior to attending Law School. This program is recommended for majors in Politics & Global Studies (BA) or English (BA); students may elect other majors, but MUST have a pre law minor and engage in the requisite coursework required for the 3 + 3 program. To be considered for Mercer Law, students must maintain a cumulative GPA of 3.5 or above in Wesleyan College coursework and score at or above the median LSAT score of the preceding year’s entering class.

Three Year Curricular Plan:


The 3 + 3 student should take at least 15 hours each semester and should be prepared to finish her Wesleyan courses in three years, prior to application for the Law School at Mercer. The following courses must be taken at Wesleyan:

Coursework Plan:


Year One: Fall Semester
WISe 101, Foreign Language, GenEd, POL 115 , ENG or POL or other major coursework

Year Two: Spring Semester
Foreign Language, COM 202 , ENG 111 , HIS 130 , ENG or POL or other major coursework

Year Two: Fall Semester
ENG or POL or other major coursework, HIS 135 , ACC 201 , PDE

Year Two: Spring Semester
ENG or POL or other major coursework, POL 320 , BUS 310 , PDE

Year Three: Fall Semester
ENG or POL or other major coursework, GenEd, COM 340 , POL 319 

Year Three: Spring Semester
ENG, POL or other major coursework, GenEd, PHI 223 

Early Admission Program


Introduction

Committed to our values of educational opportunities and excellence, Wesleyan College has provided a pathway for students to accelerate their course of study by completing both their bachelor’s degree and their master’s degree in approximately five years of full-time study, saving both time and money. Students can take up to 6 credit hours in one of our graduate programs, while still enrolled as an undergraduate student. Programs that participate in this program are: Master of Business Administration (MBA), Master of Science in Nonprofit Management, Master of Arts in Music, and Master of Arts Industrial-Organizational Psychology.

Program Summary

Students must apply for admission to the Early Admission program in their Junior year of study. If accepted to the program, the student will take two graduate courses during their senior year. Graduate-level program courses completed may be substituted by the academic advisor to count towards an unmet undergraduate degree course requirement if the course content is related (see below of courses that have been approved for substitution.) Otherwise, the graduate-level courses will be counted as elective credit.

Program Requirements

The Early Admission Program is only open to Wesleyan students who:

  • Have earned a cumulative grade-point average (GPA) of 3.00 or higher by the end of the Junior year of study.
  • Have been accepted to the graduate program by completing the admissions for the program they are applying for:

Industrial-Organizational Psychology


  • a completed application
  • a minimum GPA of 3.3
  • a statement of purpose (approximately 750-1000 words)
  • a curriculum vita or resume
  • one letter of recommendation from a Wesleyan faculty member
  • academic writing sample (a paper written for a course you completed)
  • completion of PSY 101: General Psychology   and MAT 220: Statistical Methods /PSY 220: Statistical Methods  prior to applying with at least a C grade. This program is open to psychology and business majors.
  • an admissions interview will be scheduled with the program director once all documents have been received

MBA/MS Nonprofit Management


  • a completed application
  • current major in Business Administration with the completion of at least 6 of the 12 business core classes in the major, including at least one upper level course, all with a C grade or higher
  • one letter of recommendation from a Wesleyan faculty member
  • a resume
  • an admissions interview will be scheduled with the program director once all documents have been received

Master of Arts in Music


  • a completed application
  • a minimum 3.0 GPA
  • a curriculum vita or resume
  • a statement of purpose (approximately 500-1000 words)
  • two letters of professional reference
  • Audition, Portfolio or interview with the program director
  • Students who did not major in music in their undergraduate degree must take and pass a Music Theory and Music History Entrance Exam administered by the Wesleyan College Music Department.

Early Admission Program Specifics


  1. Once a student has been admitted to the graduate program, they are eligible to enroll in two graduate courses.
  2. Being accepted into the Early Admission Program does not alter the student’s type. Until the bachelor’s degree is conferred, the student remains a bachelor’s degree-seeking student for purposes of federal and state financial aid as well as any aid awarded to them as part of their undergraduate admission.
  3. Upon graduating with a bachelor’s degree, the student is immediately eligible to take the remaining graduate classes to complete the master’s degree.
  4. To obtain a master’s degree from Wesleyan, a student must have completed the required credit hours at the graduate level required by the program. All graduate coursework counting toward the master’s degree must meet the regular, published master’s degree requirements from Wesleyan.
  5. While an undergraduate in the Early Admission Program, Wesleyan will collect and retain undergraduate tuition at Wesleyan’s rates. Financial aid, including scholarships, will be calculated in accordance to Wesleyan College’s then-current policies. Part-time students and students taking the graduate course as an overload will be charged the undergraduate rate for the course.
  6. A student must complete 150 credits total for their undergraduate and graduate degree. Therefore, students in the Industrial-Organizational Psychology program will be required to earn 123 undergraduate credits to graduate.

Course Substitutions


MBA


*Or Business elective.

MS Nonprofit Management


*Or Business elective.

M.A. Music


If the student’s senior year falls in an Academic Year starting on an odd number (for example, 2023-2024), they should choose from these courses:

  1. MUS 510: Analytical Techniques  (3 credits) may substitute for MUS 282: Form and Analysis  or any music major elective
  2. MUS 520: Technology and Video for Musicians  (3 credits) may substitute for any music major elective
  3. MUS 620: Advanced Literature Seminar  (3 credits) may substitute for MUS 287: Music Literature Seminar  or any music major elective

If the student’s senior year falls in an Academic Year starting on an even number (for example, 2024-2025), they should choose these courses:

  1. MUS 600: Music Pedagogy Seminar  (3 credits) may substitute for any music major elective
  2. MUS 610: Philosophy of Music  (3 credits) may substitute for MUS 333: Philosophy of Music  or any music elective course

Students may also substitute the two graduate courses for 6 credits of elective to complete their credits to graduate with a bachelor’s degree.

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