Academic Advising for Graduate Students
Use this Master’s Checkout Sheet to help your master’s students plan their course work. The Master’s Certificate of Completion is what the student will submit for graduation.
- Grade Changes – Grades are changed directly in SIS. This page tells you how to submit a grade change.
- Course Registration form
- Basic Form – for students who cannot register online before the end of the semester Add/Drop period.
- Form with Permissions – for students who forgot to register before the end of the semester Add/Drop period and need Whiting School Academic Affairs’ permission. This will need the signature of the Director of Graduate Studies or Director of Undergraduate Studies, as appropriate, and the Whiting School Academic Affairs office before being delivered to the Registrar.
- MechE Graduate Course Schedules
- Courses.jhu.edu – seek class information – course numbers, titles, meeting days and times, instructors, and descriptions – in all forms for the last five years to the present.
For Graduate Students new to Johns Hopkins
Students must contact their advisors to select courses before registering. They will have had to have submitted your Pre-Admission Health Form, registered for health insurance, and pay any financial obligations. If they are receiving financial aid, the department will have already notified the appropriate administrative offices.
Visit the Course Registration instructions page for information on course registration.
For Concurrent BS/MSE students returning to Johns Hopkins for the Master’s Degree
“Fifth-Year” master’s students may register by paper early while they are seniors! They must contact their advisors to select courses before registering, which can be done during Advising Week in late-March or early-April each year. Students can download and complete this Graduate Course Registration Form, and will ask their advisors to sign it.
Otherwise, visit the Course Registration instructions page for information on course registration.
Important Note: registering for Engineering for Professionals courses
To register for courses offered by the Engineering for Professionals program, courses numbered EN.xx5.xxx, students must register using the Interdivisional Course Registration form. Please visit the Registrar’s Interdivisional Registration page for info and the form.
If your research advisees or students in your courses are experiencing any kind of academic or research trouble, you and they have resources where you can refer students for help. You can also help the student find help, as well.
Contacts
- Contact Director of Ph.D. Studies Prof. Tamer Zaki at t.zaki@jhu.edu or Director of Master’s Studies Prof. Rajat Mittal at mittal@jhu.edu to discuss questions and concerns about graduate research, course work, and degree progression. If academic or research probation is considered, Academic Program Manager Mike Bernard at me-academic@jhu.edu can help create an appropriate notification letter for the student.
- Contact Student Life Administrator Chase Oatis of the Whiting School Graduate Affairs office at coatis1@jhu.edu to discuss issues regarding academic and life issues. These include mental and physical health, financial hardships, interpersonal conflict, advising concerns, coursework and research performance, and visa concerns. There is a Homewood Graduate and Postdoctoral Affairs Emergency Fund that provides limited short-term financial assistance to currently enrolled graduate students and full-time postdoctoral fellows experiencing financial hardships.
- Confidentially and informally raise any concern involving graduate students and postdoctoral fellows with the Johns Hopkins “Ombuds” Annalisa Peterson. The Ombuds Office helps you identify different solutions to your concerns, assist in informal conflict resolution, and provide feedback to the administration on problematic trends and systemic issues
Academic Support and Campus Resources
Visit the Student Well-Being page for a comprehensive list of help resources
This document describes Recognizing Students in Distress, which provides information on distressed student behavior, services to help students, and how to address situations where a student may post a danger to self and others.
Ph.D. and “essay-option” master’s students must complete an annual graduate student evaluation with their advisors, which typically are due to the department before the end of the Spring semester.
View the WSE Guide to Effective Annual Reviews for information on conducting an effective evaluation.
For students with a primary advisor outside the Department of Mechanical Engineering and have a second co-advisor who is a full-time tenure-track Mechanical Engineering professor – both professors must participate in the evaluation and sign the evaluation form.
Both the Research Advisor and Academic Co-Advisor should meet the student to discuss, complete, and sign the annual evaluation form. As a best practice, the Academic Co-Advisor should meet the student one-on-one to ask if he or she has any concerns they would like to share regarding the Research Advisor.
Check the Seminars and Events page for the EN.530.803 Mechanical Engineering Graduate Seminar and other seminars of interest.
Graduate Course Registration and Student Status
All Whiting School of Engineering graduate students will register for courses with credits. Some things to know:
- The Mechanical Engineering degree requirements do not change, even with credits assigned to courses. Degree requirements are still counted by number of courses, not number of credits. Typically, courses that would count are three credits, though some have four.
- With the addition of Center for Leadership Education (CLE) graduate courses, some courses that count toward the master’s degree can have a few as 1.5 credits. Up to six credits of courses counted toward the Master’s Degree can be from the CLE.
- All Whiting School of Engineering (WSE) graduate-level courses (.600-level or higher) have credits assigned to them.
To maintain full-time status, all WSE graduate students must be enrolled in at least 9 credits, but PhD students must be enrolled in at least 20 credits per semester. The maximum per-semester enrollment limit is 25 credits.
Ph.D. students can achieve at least 20 credits by registering for any combination of courses and seminars, as approved by one’s advisor. SIS is set to select appropriate credits:
- Seminars – 1 credit
- EN.530.803 (Fall) Mechanical Engineering Graduate Seminar – required only for first, second, and third year Ph.D. students. Those beginning their fourth year or later are no longer required to take this seminar.
- Other seminars, such as the robotics, fluids, and mechanics and materials seminars.
- WSE courses, both undergraduate and graduate – 3 or 4 credits each.
- EN.530.801 PhD Graduate Research – 3-20 credits (required every semester)
- NOTE:
- Audited courses do not count toward a student’s full-time credit load.
- Krieger School of Arts and Sciences’ graduate-level courses will not have credits listed in SIS, but will be recognized as 3-4 credits toward one’s full-time credit load.
- When dropping and adding courses, SIS will not allow students to drop courses if the credit load drops below the 9-credit full-time threshold. They can add new courses first, and then drop the courses they wish to drop.
- If you wish to change to part-time status, visit the “PhD – Part-Time” tab of this section to learn more.
- If you wish to drop or change courses in SIS but cannot because of the minimum-20-credit requirement, see the “Course Registration – Changing Credits on Research Courses” section of this page to learn how to do this.
- If there is a need to register for more than 25 credits, students can contact Academic Program Manager Mike Bernard. The Whiting School will consider exceptions to allow this.
Mechanical Engineering Ph.D. students may switch to part-time status after the successful completion of the Graduate Board Oral examination and the Teaching Assistant requirement, with approval of both the research advisor and the Graduate Program Chair, as well as the International Office for international students.
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS
Visit the Office of International Services’ “Full-Time Study Requirements” page that explains U.S. federal law on maintaining F-1 visas, which requires international students to always maintain full-time status, unless if in the final semester a course load less than full-time is needed to complete the degree requirements.
PART-TIME TUITION
Students are charged tuition per-credit. The student’s advisor or the department may choose to cover this charge, but that is not guaranteed.
COURSE REGISTRATION
Part-time students will take three credits of EN.530.801 Graduate Research each semester.
Part-time students or their advisors will pay the part-time per-credit tuition.
PART-TIME RESTRICTIONS
- Audited courses do not count toward a student’s credit load, but they will be charged tuition-per-credit for them.
- Part-time students are ineligible to work as a student worker, including as a Teaching Assistant, and will not be eligible for graduate student salary. One exception: international students can be paid for hourly positions, including Teaching Assistants.
- Part-time students enrolled in the University health insurance must pay the full premium.
HOW TO OBTAIN PART-TIME STATUS FOR A STUDENT
- Students can contact Academic Program Manager Mike Bernard to confirm eligibility to switch.
- They will obtain approval from both the research advisor and the Graduate Program Chair
- International students must first obtain approval from the International Office.
Visit the Whiting School Graduate Credit Hours page for information.
Whiting School graduate students are eligible for non-residency status when all degree requirements except the writing of the dissertation are complete. The dissertation research must be finished before the non-resident status can be obtained.
Whiting School graduate students are typically granted only one semester of non-residency with the expectation that the dissertation will be written and prepared for defense in that semester. The dissertation defense can occur during that semester or shortly thereafter. The Whiting School will consider exception requests for an additional semester of non-residency.
NON-RESIDENT TUITION
Non-resident students pay only 10% of the full-time tuition but will still have all the privileges of full-time students such as access to campus services and faculty advising.
NON-RESIDENT RESTRICTIONS
Non-resident students cannot enroll in courses and would lose the Whiting School’s financial support for health insurance. The department could choose to cover health insurance charges, but that is not guaranteed.
Non-resident students are automatically enrolled in health insurance, but can waive the insurance, if eligible for waiver by proof of enrollment in another health insurance plan with similar coverage.
To maintain non-resident status, students will have to register for non-resident status each semester and provide a letter explaining their progress toward the degree’s completion.
HOW TO OBTAIN NON-RESIDENT STATUS
- Students can contact Academic Program Manager Mike Bernard to confirm eligibility for non-resident status.
- They will complete the Non-Resident Status for Whiting School form, which Mike will send to the Whiting School Academic Affairs office for review and approval.
- If the Non-Resident request is denied, a student may be eligible for part-time status.
RESOURCES
- Graduate Residency and Registration Policies
- Graduate Board Forms, which include the Non-Resident Application and the Non-Resident Annual Report
- Whiting School of Engineering Policy on Health Insurance page (select the Health Insurance tab)
Master’s students of the Department of Mechanical Engineering may become eligible for part-time status.
“ALL-COURSE” MASTER’S STUDENTS
All “all-course” master’s students must register full-time most or all semesters for a minimum of nine credits. If in a student’s final semester, less than nine credits are needed to complete the degree requirements, students can switch to part-time status.
“ESSAY” MASTER’S STUDENTS
After meeting the minimum two-semester “full-time” residency requirement – where a student pays full-time tuition for a minimum of two semesters – Whiting School master’s students who have not yet completed the research to the point where the final and sole activity is essay/thesis writing must maintain their “residency” status, but can register “part-time” by registering for eight credits or less in their final semester.
For each semester where essay research/co-op and writing occurs, students must register for one of these courses, typically in the last one or two semesters.
- Research and Writing – EN.530.821 Master’s Essay – Research and Writing (through Spring 2022) or EN.530.823 MSE Graduate Research (Fall 2022 and later)
- Co-Op – EN.530.822 Master’s Essay – Co-Op and EN.910.600 Non-Resident Status
While these courses can grant 3-10 credits per semester, most students will register for 3 or 6 credits per semester. Students must check with their faculty advisors to confirm when to register for the course.
For International Students
International students completing the degree with an Essay – Co-Op option must also enroll for EN.500.851 Engineering Research Practicum and apply for Curricular Practical Training (CPT). Visit these sites for information:
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS
Visit the Office of International Services’ “Full-Time Study Requirements” page that explains U.S. federal law on maintaining F-1 visas, which requires students to maintain full-time status, unless if in the final semester a course load less than full-time is needed to complete the degree requirements.
PART-TIME TUITION
Students are charged tuition per-credit. The student’s advisor or the department may choose to cover this charge, but that is not guaranteed.
PART-TIME HEALTH INSURANCE
While part-time master’s students are eligible to remain on the University’s student health insurance plan, they must pay the full health insurance premium. There is no financial aid for health insurance for part-time students.
COURSE REGISTRATION
The Mechanical Engineering department requires enrollment in courses:
- Any remaining courses for the degree – 3-4 credits each
- Research and Writing – EN.530.821 Master’s Essay – Research and Writing (through Spring 2022) or EN.530.823 MSE Graduate Research (Fall 2022 and later)
- Co-Op – EN.530.822 Master’s Essay – Co-Op and EN.500.805 Non-Resident Status
PART-TIME RESTRICTIONS
- Audited courses do not count toward a student’s credit load, but they will be charged tuition-per-credit for them.
- Part-time American students are ineligible to work as a student worker, including as a Teaching Assistant; but part-time international students are still eligible to work as a student worker, including as a Teaching Assistant and be paid hourly.
- Part-time students enrolled in the University health insurance must pay the full premium.
HOW A STUDENT CAN OBTAIN PART-TIME STATUS
- Students can contact Academic Program Manager Mike Bernard to confirm eligibility to switch. He will notify the Registrar upon confirmation of eligibility to switch.
- International students must obtain approval by completing the Reduced Course Request form. This form will need the advisor’s signature and will be delivered to the Office of International Services.
Visit the Whiting School Graduate Credit Hours page for information.
“ALL-COURSE” MASTER’S STUDENTS
Students taking the “all-course” master’s degree are not eligible for non-residency status.
“ESSAY” MASTER’S STUDENTS
Whiting School graduate students are eligible for non-residency status when all degree requirements except the writing of the master’s essay/thesis are complete. The essay/thesis research must be finished before the non-resident status can be requested.
Whiting School graduate students are typically granted only one semester of non-residency with the expectation that the essay will be written, read, and approved in that semester. The Whiting School will consider exception requests for an additional semester of non-residency.
NON-RESIDENT TUITION
Non-resident students pay only 10% of the full-time tuition but will still have all the privileges of full-time students such as access to campus services and faculty advising.
NON-RESIDENT RESTRICTIONS
Non-resident students cannot enroll in courses and would lose the Whiting School’s financial support for health insurance. The department could choose to cover health insurance charges, but that is not guaranteed.
Non-resident students are automatically enrolled in health insurance, but can waive the insurance, if eligible for waiver by proof of enrollment in another health insurance plan with similar coverage.
To maintain non-resident status, students will have to register for non-resident status each semester and provide a letter explaining their progress toward the degree’s completion.
HOW A STUDENT CAN OBTAIN NON-RESIDENT STATUS
- Students can contact Academic Program Manager Mike Bernard to confirm eligibility for non-resident status.
- They will complete the Non-Resident Status form and deliver it to Mike, who will send it to the Whiting School Academic Affairs office for review and approval.
- If the Non-Resident request is denied, a student may be eligible for part-time status.
RESOURCES
- Graduate Residency and Registration Policies
- Graduate Board Forms, which include the Non-Resident Application and the Non-Resident Annual Report
- Whiting School of Engineering Policy on Health Insurance page (select the Health Insurance tab)
Occasionally, extenuating circumstances may require graduate students to take a leave of absence from their studies.
Graduate students may apply for up to four semesters of leave of absence when medical conditions, compulsory military service, or personal or family hardship prevents them from continuing their graduate studies.
Visit the Homewood Graduate and Postdoctoral Affairs page for Enrollment Change forms. Students will select the appropriate form to either request, extend, or return from a Leave of Absence.
The forms will explain that student privileges, degree progress, and access to health insurance may be affected. Students can contact the Registrar’s health insurance staff at ASENInsurance@jhu.edu to discuss their situations and determine what options exist.
Students must complete the appropriate form, obtain the appropriate signatures, and obtain the required documentation as noted on the form, and send or deliver the completed form and supporting documentation to Academic Program Manager Mike Bernard in Latrobe 230 or at me-academic@jhu.edu. He will submit the request to the Whiting School’s Assistant Dean for Graduate Affairs, Christine Kavanagh for review and approval. Students will be notified upon approval.
Academic Mentoring for Undergraduate Students
These resources are available for advising undergraduate students.
- The Faculty Mentoring page will describe faculty mentor roles, expectations, and available resources for effective meetings with student “mentees.”
- The Academic Mentoring – Undergraduate Tutorial and Tips will provide most information needed for undergraduate advising.
- Visit the MechE Undergraduate – Academic Advising webpage for information that is helpful to your mentorees.
- Canvas has replaced Blackboard as the tool that most instructors use to post assignments, announcements, and grades (which provides a confidential way to do so). Your TA(s) can be given access to Canvas. For help, visit the Canvas Faculty page in Canvas learn how to get started, setting up courses, mobile access, and support.
- If an undergraduate student wants an Advising Hold released in SIS, please have the student contact his Whiting School professional academic advisor.
Help options exist to help students who are experiencing academic troubles. Whether students are not showing up for class, not submitting homework, or not doing well in assignments, the earlier we can spot problems, the better we can help our students.
Student Well-Being and Support
Visit the Student Well-Being page for a comprehensive list of help resources
This document describes Recognizing Students in Distress, which provides information on distressed student behavior, services to help students, and how to address situations where a student may post a danger to self and others.
Academic Support and Campus Resources
Visit the Whiting School Undergraduate Advising Academic Support and Campus Resources for links to various support services, including the Learning Den, PILOT, and Study Consulting.
Starfish – notify us early
Starfish is a portal to note your students’ academic performance or other concerns that will interfere with their well-being and success. It is accessible through your course’s Canvas page. Starfish is linked in the course navigation menu on the left side of the window.
Information entered in Starfish will be shared with the Whiting School Academic Advising office as they can initiate and coordinate any remedial actions to help students in trouble.
It is important to provide this information as you see it happening. Don’t wait! Starfish collects data from every instructor and alerts the Academic Advising office of patterns of concerns that students may have. Even if you have a small class or do not find it important, it actually is very important to share your concerns through Starfish.
Visit the Starfish page for instructions and help info.
- Grade Changes – Grades are changed directly in SIS. This page tells you how to submit a grade change.
- Course Registrations – if a student cannot register online through SIS, they must register through SEAM. Visit the Undergraduate Advising page > Course Registration Instructions… > Unable to Register in SIS for info on how students can do so.
- Undergraduate – visit the Undergraduate Advising page and select the “Advising Manuals” section.
- Master’s and PhD – visit the Graduate Advising page and select the “Advising Manuals” section.
Visit the University Course Catalog for information on degree programs, academic policies, majors, majors, and faculty.
Some policies that students find important:
- Registration, Credit Limits, Retaking Courses, Courses “out of sequence”
- Grades, Academic Standing and Probation
- AP Credits, Transfer Credits
- Student Affairs: Career Center, Disability Support Services, Student Employment, Multicultural Concerns
- Study Abroad
- Course Numbers, Course Areas
- Mechanical Engineering in the Course Catalog
- Restrictions on counting Peabody courses for H&S requirements (select the Distribution tab)
Visit the Registrar’s Student Privacy FERPA page on how to protect a student’s privacy – from personal information to protecting student grade info.
- MechE Undergraduate Course Schedules
- JHU Public Course Search – seek class information – course numbers, titles, meeting days and times, instructors, and descriptions – in all forms for the last five years to the present.
Visit the Mechanical Engineering – “5-year” Combined Bachelor’s/Masters Degree program for info.
Visit our Careers and Life page to help your students with career exploration, networking, and internships and jobs!
Academic Advising for Visiting Students
Very little academic advising is necessary for visiting students, as they rarely take a course during their visit. For administrative and visa purposes, visiting students must register every semester that they are here – even if they are with us just one day of the semester as part of their appointment period – for one of these courses:
- Visiting Graduate Students – EN 990.890 Graduate Research Practicum
- Visiting Undergraduate Students – EN.990.997 Undergraduate Research Practicum
These are not courses where they attend class, do homework, take exams, and the like. These help the University comply with registration requirements for visitors. These “courses” do not have credits nor are they graded, as they simply show in our University systems that they are present with us.
Newly arrived visiting students must complete their registration immediately upon arrival and no later than five days after the “program start date” on their DS-2019. Students whose visit continues into another semester must complete registration no later than five days from the start of the new term.
- Visiting Undergraduate Student – is currently a paper form. The Registrar will have the form available.
- Visiting Graduate Student