Admission Policies
Applications and Procedures
A . Application for Tuition and Fee Reductions and Scholarships
Established by the Legislature
Students should contact the Admissions Office at each university for
information on eligibility for tuition and fee reductions and scholarships
established by the Legislature.
B. Application Deadlines
An applicant for admission must submit the required application for
admission and the necessary official transcript or transcripts and other
required documents to the Enrollment Services Center.
C. Records Required
Applicants who are 21 years of age or younger must submit Enhanced ACT
(or SAT-I) results, an official high school transcript, if a high
school graduate,
and an official transcript for all previous college work as part
of their
application. Applicants who are older than 21 years of age and
who have valid
ACT/SAT-I exam results (taken within the last 5 years) must
submit those scores,
along with an official high school transcript and an official
transcript for all
previous college work. Applicants who are older than 21 years of
age and who
do not have valid ACT/SAT-I exam results or who have not taken
the exams are
not expected to take the exam. However, they are required to
submit an official
high school transcript, if a high school graduate, and an
official transcript for all
previous college work. Applicants should also submit any other
records,
data or letters required to support eligibility for admission,
including competency
test scores. SAT scores will be converted to ACT equivalences
according to a
conversion table approved by the Board of Regents. Note: An
official transcript
is one that bears the original seal and signature of the
official in charge of
records at that institution and is transmitted directly between
institutions.
D. Preadmission Immunization Requirements
1. All new incoming freshmen, newly admitted graduate students,
transfers, special students who reside on campus, and returning former
students born after 1956 and who receive instruction on one of the
residential campuses, and students admitted after May 1993 who are attending
the Sioux Falls site must document their immune status for measles and
rubella. Proof of two doses of measles vaccine or of the presence of an
immune antibody titer against measles shall be required. Immunization for
tetanus, diphtheria, poliomyelitis, and mumps, as well as a tuberculin test,
is recommended. This documentation may be accomplished by either a State
Health Department certificate, or it may be included as part of the
institution's physical exam report.
2. A student who fails to provide satisfactory documentation of his or
her immune status shall not be permitted to register for or to attend
classes. An institution's president or the president's designee may grant an
extension of the deadline for an amount of time determined necessary. In no
case may the extension be longer than one semester.
3. Students who are unable to ascertain their immunization status may
obtain, at their own expense, the necessary tests and vaccination from the
Student Health Service of their university.
4. In the event the South Dakota State Department of Health declares an
epidemic of measles or rubella, the institution involved shall provide to
the State Department of Health a list of students who have not submitted
immunization documentation. Subsequent campus actions shall consider the
advice and authority of the South Dakota State Department of Health.
Students who have no vaccination or immunity against the required
preventable infectious diseases may be dismissed from the campus.
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