Deadlines and Courses
View deadlines, course work details, program timelines including receiving a master's in two years and PhD in five years.
Deadlines
Semester | Fall | Spring | Summer | |
---|---|---|---|---|
International students: | ||||
Application due | May 1 | October 1 | February 1 | |
Offer letter returned from applicant | May 15 | October 15 | February 15 | |
Domestic students: | ||||
Application due | July 1 | November 15 | April 1 | |
Offer letter returned from applicant | July 15 | December 1 | April 15 | |
All students: | ||||
Employment documents returned from applicant to AFS office | August 1 | January 1 | June 1 | |
Classes begin (approx.) | August 15 | January 15 | June 1 |
“Application due” means that you must have all required application documents and forms, including the Agreement to Advise form, turned in. After these deadlines, students admission and program will be delayed until the next semester.
Courses
Refer to the Animal Science (ANSI) OSU Catalog for the list of available courses.
- 5000 Master’s Research and Thesis
- 5010
- 5102 Ethics and Professionalism
- 5110 Seminar
- 5113 Basic Repro. Phys.
- 6000 Doctoral Research and Thesis
Realize that most graduate courses are not offered every semester. View the partial list of when courses are generally offered.
Plan of Study
Each student needs to plan out the courses they want to take, by semester. This plan of study is developed in consultation with the student’s committee, and the committee approves the plan. The plan can be modified as needed. Students should develop and submit a plan of study by the end of their first semester.
AG-IDEA
Great Plains IDEA offers online graduate courses in Animal Science. These are acceptable to use in your plan of study at OSU. Some students find that a course they need is only offered there, or that these courses fit their research schedule better. However, OSU does not cover the tuition for these courses (currently $600 per credit hour).
Seminar
Students enroll in ANSI 5110/6110, Seminar, to learn and practice scientific presentation skills. MS students take 1 credit (1 semester) and PhDs take 2 credits (2 different semesters). We recommend that MS students wait until their second year to take Seminar. PhDs can take Seminar as needed.
Generally, each discipline (nutrition, meats, etc.) offers a section of Seminar for students to enroll in. When you are enrolled in Seminar, it is just like any other course and you will receive a syllabus, assignments, and a grade. You should attend and participate in your disciplines’ seminar even during the semesters that you aren’t enrolled for credit, for the educational value.
Research Hours
Students enroll in ANSI 5000/6000, Research and Thesis/Dissertation, to account for the University resources they use in conducting their research and preparing and defending their thesis/dissertation. This course is self-directed; meetings, requirements, etc. are determined by your advisor. The course is graded pass/fail.
MS-thesis students are required to take 6 credits of ANSI 5000, and PhDs are required to take 30 credits on ANSI 6000. These credits are not necessarily taken at the same time that research and writing is done, but the credits are taken when they are needed to work in with the rest of the course plan. Students should be working on research and writing all the time, not just when they take research hours.
Course Performance
Graduate College Academic Regulation Section 11.0.
You must maintain a “B” average (3.0 cumulative GPA) to avoid academic probation.
If you score below a 3.0 for two semesters, an academic mitigation plan will be developed
with you, your advisor, the graduate advisor, and the Dean of the Graduate College.
This plan can include dismissal from the program.
Grades of “D” or “F” are considered “failing” grades in the graduate program, and receiving a D or F may result in immediate dismissal. They cannot be used on a Plan of Study. Courses below a C must be re-taken and receive a C or better, or replaced with an acceptable course. Replacement is at the discretion of the committee.
To receive a graduate degree, a student must have a minimum 3.0 GPA in the coursework
taken for graduate credit.
Acceptable performance in courses is an expectation. However, you must also learn
to balance your course work, job duties, research and writing, and your personal activities.
You may not be able to always prioritize course work above all other activities. There
will be inevitable conflicts, and you must resolve those conflicts for your situation.
Enrollment /Credit Hour Requirements
- Fall/Spring Enrollment Guidelines
- Summer Enrollment
- OSU Graduate Student Tuition Waiver Benefit Information
Minimum hours required:
Fall | Spring | Summer | |
---|---|---|---|
Full-time status, not on assistantship | 9 | 9 | 3 |
Full-time status, on assistantship | 6 | 6 | 2 |
Final semester | 2 | 2 | 2 |
PhD candidate (passed QE) | 2 | 2 | 2 |
Maintain graduate status* | 1 | 1 | 1 |
*A student not enrolled for 3 consecutive semesters must re-apply for admission. International students not on a assistantship do not need to enroll in summer hours just to maintain visa status.
Incoming (first-semester) international students cannot be enrolled in only online
courses. They must enroll in a course requiring them to be present in Stillwater (regular
course, research hours, etc.)
Program Timelines
Graduate degrees are awarded when they are earned by the student, not on any specific timeline. It is your responsibility to complete the work required by your committee to the level they expect. Periodically check with your major advisor and committee to ensure you are making progress on your degree in the timeline you desire. Realize that some aspects of graduate education (experience, seasoning, participating in conferences, etc.) require a certain amount of time and cannot be accelerated.
In general, one should expect a thesis MS degree to take approximately 2 calendar
years to complete. The requirement for full-time graduate student status is 6 hours
per spring/fall and 3 hours in the summer. That adds to 15 hours per calendar year,
resulting in 2 years typically required to meet the MS requirement.
In general, one should expect a Ph.D. (following an MS) to take approximately 3 calendar
years to complete. This timeline is more variable among disciplines than MS degrees.
For example, a Ph.D. in genetics is often a somewhat longer program. The requirement
for full-time graduate student status is 6 hours per spring/fall and 3 hours in the
summer. The first two years at that pace result in 30 credits. PhD students typically
take qualifying exams upon completion of coursework (generally after the second year).
This results in becoming a doctoral candidate, after which the minimum number of hours
drops to 2 in all semesters.
In general, one should expect a Ph.D. (following a BS) to take approximately 5 calendar years to complete. Again, this timeline is more variable as described above.
MS students must complete their degree within 7 years of matriculation, and PhD within 9 years.
Finish In Two (MS)
This is a suggestion for a course plan for a MS-T student interested in nutrition.
Semester | Course | Hours |
---|---|---|
1 Fall | ANSI 5102 - Ethics and Professionalism STAT 5013 - Statistics for Experimenters 1 Elective (ANSI 5XX3) (Rumenology) |
2 3 3 |
2 Spring | ANSI 5021 - Research Interpretation BIOC 5533 - Agricultural Biochemistry Elective (ANSI 5XX3) (Vitamins and Minerals) |
1 3 3 |
3 Summer | ANSI 5000 - Research | 2 |
4 Fall | ANSI 5110 - Seminar ANSI 5000 - Research Elective (ANSI 5XX3) (Adv. Nutrition) |
1 2 3 |
5 Spring | Elective (ANSI 5XX3) (Proteins) Elective (ANSI 5XX3) (Energy Metab) |
3 3 |
6 Summer | ANSI 5000 - Research | 2 |
Total | 31 |
Semester | Suggested Activity |
---|---|
1 Fall | Literature review TA a course |
2 Spring | Conduct project TA a course |
3 Summer | Conduct Project |
4 Fall | Conduct project; Draft thesis TA a course |
5 Spring | Write thesis; Apply to graduate |
6 Summer | Defend and graduate |
Finish In Five (Ph.D. direct from a B.S.)
This is a suggestion for a course plan for a Ph.D. student interested in nutrition.
Semester | Course | Hours |
---|---|---|
1 Fall | ANSI 5102 - Ethics and Professionalism STAT 5013 - Statistics for Experimenters 1 Elective (ANSI 5XX3) (Rumenology) |
2 3 3 |
2 Spring | ANSI 5021 - Research Interpretation BIOC 5533 - Agricultural Biochemistry Elective (ANSI 5XX3) (Vitamins and Minerals) |
1 3 3 |
3 Summer | ANSI 6000 - Research | 2 |
4 Fall | ANSI 5110 - Seminar STAT 5023 - Statistics for Experimenters 2 Elective (ANSI 5XX3) (Adv. Rum Nutrition) |
1 3 3 |
5 Spring | Elective (ANSI 5XX3) (Proteins) Elective (ANSI 5XX3) (Energy Metab) |
3 3 |
6 Summer | ANSI 6000 - Research | 2 |
7 Fall | STAT 5023 - Experimental Design Elective (ANSI 5XX3) (Adv. Non-rum Nutr) |
3 3 |
Qualifying Exams - Doctoral Candidacy | ||
8 Spring | ANSI 6000 - Research Elective |
2 3 |
9 Summer | ANSI 6000 - Research | 2 |
10 Fall | ANSI 6000 - Research Elective |
2 3 |
11 Spring | ANSI 6000 - Research ANSI 5110 - Seminar |
2 1 |
12 Summer | ANSI 6000 - Research | 2 |
13 Fall | ANSI 6000 - Research | 2 |
14 Spring | ANSI 6000 - Research | 2 |
15 Summer | ANSI 6000 - Research | 2 |
Total | 64 |