Pictured | Mackenzie Andrews | Art Education | Elkhart, Indiana (hometown)
Emily Thomas | Art Education | Volunteer activities include aiding seniors with gardening tasks and at schools throughout the year; also a tutor | Bristol, Indiana (hometown)
Mission
The mission of the Ernestine M. Raclin School of the Arts is to develop engaged citizens with exceptional abilities in the arts.
General Information
Welcome to the Ernestine M. Raclin School of the Arts, center stage at IU South Bend for Communication Studies, Music, New Media, Theatre & Dance, and Visual Arts. The creative arts are the essential core of civilization, reflecting the heart and soul of communities and individuals. The arts are our heritage and guide our vision of the future. At the Raclin School of the Arts we celebrate with breathtaking performances, spirited conversation, and thought provoking imagery, all born out of our dedication to providing students with a superb arts education.
Our international faculty of celebrated performers, recognized artists, and dedicated educators offer their expertise and talent in small classes where one-on-one interaction isn’t the exception, it is the rule. Raclin School of the Arts students enjoy the advantages of a liberal arts degree program combined with exceptional arts training.
Admission
Students who wish to major in a subject area offered by the Ernestine M. Raclin School of the Arts must take the following steps:
- Seek admission to IU South Bend. (See admission section in the front of this publication.)
Incoming freshmen must attend one of the mandatory orientation sessions. Ernestine M. Raclin School of the Arts majors are directly admitted to the school and need the information presented in this orientation session. All entering freshmen must take university placement examinations in mathematics and reading and complete courses as determined by placement examination results. English placement level and course requirement is determined by the SAT score or by taking an optional placement examination in English. Depending upon program requirements, some students may need to take additional courses. - Students are certified into degree programs only after completion of an entrance procedure as stipulated by each major area. The procedure may be an audition, an interview with a faculty member, a review of high school transcripts, a portfolio review, or some other method as prescribed by the area coordinator of each discipline. (Prospective music students should see the section on bachelor’s degrees in music for entrance procedures.) Transfer students must wait until after they are admitted to IU South Bend and their transcripts are evaluated by the admissions office to be advised.
- Transfer students must consult with the coordinator of arts student services to determine their placement examination requirements. Transfer course equivalencies and fulfillment of degree requirements in the major are not guaranteed and the number of courses that transfer and count towards an IU South Bend degree is limited (see the specific information listed under each degree). The faculty in each area may require a transfer student to retake courses transferred from another university or Indiana University campus in order to guarantee proficiency. Should questions arise regarding the transfer of general-education courses, transfer students must be prepared to present a syllabus and course description or a portfolio (if appropriate) to facilitate appropriate course transfers.
The Student’s Responsibility
Each student in the Ernestine M. Raclin School of the Arts is responsible for reading and understanding all requirements described in this publication. All colleges establish certain academic requirements that must be met before a degree is granted. These regulations concern such things as curricula and courses, the requirements for majors and minors, and university procedures. Advisors, directors, and deans are available to advise students on how to meet these requirements, but each student is individually responsible for fulfilling them. If requirements are not satisfied, the degree is withheld pending completion.
Academic Regulations
Students in the Ernestine M. Raclin School of the Arts are subject to the regulations and policies of the university in the front section of this publication as well as a number of specialized regulations that apply to the school.
Occasional changes in the graduation requirements for Ernestine M. Raclin School of the Arts majors may lead to uncertainty as to what requirements are applicable for a given graduating student. For the campuswide general-education requirements and other academic matters, the student may choose either the IU South Bend Bulletin in effect at the time of matriculation to IU South Bend or the IU South Bend Bulletin in effect at the time of graduation. For meeting requirements of the major, the choice is between the IU South Bend Bulletin in effect when the student is accepted into the Ernestine M. Raclin School of the Arts or the IU South Bend Bulletin in effect when the student graduates.
Arts Plagiarism Policy
Students caught plagiarizing could jeopardize their standing in the university. The associate dean for academics of the Ernestine M. Raclin School of the Arts adopts the Indiana University Code of Student Rights, Responsibilities, and Conduct’s definition of plagiarism: “presenting someone else’s work, including the work of other students, as one’s own. Any ideas or materials taken from another source for either written or oral use must be fully acknowledged, unless the information is common knowledge. What is common knowledge may differ from course to course.” Visit www.dsa.indiana.edu/Code/index2 for more information.
First Offense
Offenders will be subjected to the following repercussions:
- The instructor will meet with the student to discuss the instance in question as well as inform them of the repercussions.
- The instructor will submit a copy of the plagiarism to the department chair.
- The instructor will report the plagiarism to the area faculty.
- The instructor will contact the coordinator of student services for the Ernestine M. Raclin School of the Arts and have a record of the plagiarism placed in the student’s academic file.
Appropriate punishment is at the instructor’s discretion and may include the following actions: expulsion from the course, the degree program, and the Ernestine M. Raclin School of the Arts.
Second Offense
Offenders will be subjected to the following repercussions:
- The instructor will meet with the student to discuss the instance in question as well as inform them of the repercussions.
- The instructor will submit a copy of the plagiarism to the department chair.
- The instructor will report the plagiarism to the area faculty.
- The area faculty will decide whether the student remains a major or whether they will be expelled from the degree program. In deciding, the faculty may request a written petition from the student.
- The instructor will contact the coordinator of student services for the Ernestine M. Raclin School of the Arts and have a record of the plagiarism placed in the student’s academic file.
- The instructor will notify the assistant/associate dean for academics, the dean, and other appropriate administrative personnel in the Ernestine M. Raclin School of the Arts about the plagiarism.
- The instructor will notify the Office of the Registrar of the plagiarism and have a notation placed in the student’s permanent academic record. (Students who are reported to the Office of the Registrar are not eligible for the Academic Renewal Policy.)
Appropriate punishment is up to instructor’s discretion and may include the following actions: expulsion from the course, the degree program, and the Ernestine M. Raclin School of the Arts.
Third Offense
Students caught plagiarizing more than two times will automatically be expelled from the Ernestine M. Raclin School of the Arts.
Residency Requirement
A candidate for a degree from the Ernestine M. Raclin School of the Arts must complete a significant portion of work, especially during the senior year, while in residence at IU South Bend. (See the specific requirement listed under the degrees that follow.) A student is normally expected to complete the work for a degree within 10 years. Failure to do so may require passing comprehensive examinations on the subjects in the area(s) of concentration, and fulfilling the requirements in the current IU South Bend Bulletin.
GPA Requirement
The faculty of the Ernestine M. Raclin School of the Arts expects all students to maintain a minimum 2.0 cumulative grade point average (CGPA). This includes all courses in the major, campuswide general-education courses, and electives. All arts students required to take ENG-W 131 Reading, Writing, and Inquiry I or SPCH-S 121 Public Speaking must complete the courses with a C or higher. Grades below C– in any course required for the major do not count toward the completion of the degree.
Application for Degrees
An application for a degree must be filed in the office of the coordinator of arts student services, Ernestine M. Raclin School of the Arts, no later than October 1 for May graduation, or March 1 for August and December graduations.
All credit hours of candidates for degrees, except those of the current semester, must be on record at least six weeks prior to the conferring of degrees. Credit hours by correspondence must be on record at least three weeks prior to the conferring of degrees. A student may not be awarded an associate degree and a bachelor’s degree in the same field in the same academic year.
Bachelor’s Degrees
The Ernestine M. Raclin School of the Arts offers instruction leading to the Bachelor of Arts with concentrations in fine arts, communication studies, music, and theatre; Bachelor of Fine Arts with concentrations in fine arts, new media, and theatre; Bachelor of Music; and Bachelor of Music Education, and Bachelor of Art Education.
General Requirements
Ernestine M. Raclin School of the Arts students must meet the following minimum degree requirements by the time they expect to graduate:
- Complete at least 120-129 credit hours (see specific degree requirements). The total may include 4 credit hours of military science (not included in CGPA).
- Complete at least 26 credit hours of the work of the senior year and at least 10 credit hours above the first-level courses in the major subject (not necessarily during the senior year) while in residence at IU South Bend. The 10 credit hours in the major subject must be taken in courses approved by the major department. Transfer students may expect to transfer no more than 95 credit hours toward the minimum 120 credit hours necessary for graduation in the Ernestine M. Raclin School of the Arts. This limit applies also to credit hours earned at other campuses of Indiana University. Ensemble credit hours earned by music majors do not apply to the 120 credit hour minimum.
- Achieve a minimum CGPA of 2.0.
- Complete all requirements in the student’s major and minor areas with a C– or higher. However, the overall GPA in these areas may not fall below 2.0 (C). Any course in which the student receives a grade of F does not count in the credit hours accumulated for graduation.
- Pass an upper-division examination. Students are eligible for placement in the upper-division approximately halfway through the degree program, upon completion of 56 credit hours, with a significant number of hours in the major area. A student’s readiness for the upper-division is determined by the student’s faculty advisor and department chair with input from the coordinator of arts student services. Upper-division reviews are a portfolio review in finel arts, a twenty-minute performance in music, a monologue or portfolio review in theatre, and a major paper or project in communication studies, as determined by the faculty in communication studies.
- Complete at least 30 credit hours of coursework at the 300– or 400–level.
- Any student completing the undergraduate requirements for a degree in the Ernestine M. Raclin School of the Arts with a cumulative grade point average of 3.65 is graduated with distinction; 3.80, with high distinction; 3.90 (3.95 in music courses), with highest distinction.
Restrictions
Not more than 60 credit hours earned in accredited two-year institutions may be credited toward a bachelor’s degree.
By special permission of the dean or department chair, a maximum of 12 credit hours toward a bachelor’s degree may be earned through special credit examination, correspondence study, or online instruction*. Ordinarily students in residence in the school are permitted to enroll concurrently in courses offered through the Indiana University Independent Study Program (correspondence courses). Any correspondence courses in the student’s major must also have the approval of the departmental department chair. SPCH-S 121 Public Speaking may not be taken by correspondence. SPCH-S 121 Public Speaking, SPCH-S 205 Introduction to Speech Communication, and JOUR-C 200 Introduction to Mass Communications may not be accomplished by special credit examination.