Student

Grievance Policy and Procedures for Students Filing Complaints Other than Discrimination or Unprofessional Conduct Against Faculty, Staff, or Administrators

 

Grievance Policy and Procedures for Students Filing Complaints Other than Discrimination or Unprofessional Conduct Against Faculty, Staff, or Administrators

UML 00-01

(Issued Concurrently as and as Appendix R of the Faculty Handbook)

(Supersedes UML 96-07)

Responsible Office: Vice President for Enrollment Management

 

Issued:       May 2000

Revised:     April 2022

Applies to:  Faculty, staff, students, and administration

 

Sexual Assault, Intimate Partner/Domestic Violence, Dating Violence and Stalking Policy

Humboldt State University (HSU) is committed to maintaining and strengthening an educational, working, and living environment founded on dignity and social responsibility. Sexual misconduct (including sexual assault and sexual harassment), intimate partner/domestic violence, dating violence and stalking as well as acts of retaliation against survivors go against the standards and ideals of our community and will not be tolerated. HSU aims to eliminate these harmful actions through education, training, clear policy, and serious consequences for violations of this policy.

P16-01 Email Policy (Archived)

Definition

This document describes the email services provided by Humboldt State University (HSU), and outlines the campus’ responsible use policy for HSU faculty, staff, students, volunteers, emeriti, auxiliaries, and others who receive a university-provided email account.

Authority

ICSUAM 8000 – System Wide Information Security Policy

Scope

All persons and departments assigned an HSU email account.

 

Data Management Policy

Definition

Humboldt State University is committed to making decisions based on data. The quality of those decisions is directly linked to the consistency, integrity, and completeness of the data stored in HSU’s enterprise systems. A solid governance foundation paves the way for users to trust and value institutional data and to leverage the data to its potential. Access to campus systems for the purpose of maintaining records within those systems or reporting the data within those systems should be granted to employees with a legitimate business need.

Registration Policy and Procedure for Students

POLICY: Priority and Scheduling of Registration


Students shall be allowed to register in the following order:

GROUP 1: Priority Students

Category A - Students with disabilities and registered with the Student Disability Resource Center (SDRC) who would not otherwise achieve their academic goals within a reasonable period of time due to an on-going disability.

Category B - Students who participate in intercollegiate sports governed by the NCAA.

Fundraising Policy

The Office of Development and Alumni Relations (Development Office) and the Humboldt State University Advancement Foundation (HSUAF) are responsible for raising and managing private gift funds for Humboldt State University. Working with deans, faculty, and staff, the Development Office provides specialized fundraising services including annual giving, major gifts, planned giving, prospect research, and fundraising consultation. In addition, the Development Office is responsible for the stewardship of gifts.

Space Management Policy

 
Effective Date: 11/13/15

 

Definition

The physical facilities of Humboldt State University are resources that must be managed, maintained, and controlled in a manner that contributes most toward fulfilling the University's mission. Space is assigned on the basis of programmatic need and academic priorities, and may be reassigned if those needs or priorities change.

Co-listing of Graduate and Undergraduate Courses Policy

Humboldt State University allows individual degree programs to offer upper-division (300 or 400-level) undergraduate majors courses (no upper division general education courses) with graduate (500- or 600-level) courses having similar course content in a co-listing arrangement with a single instructor and a common meeting schedule. Co-listing (also known as co-convening or dual-listing) of courses allows for more interaction between undergraduate and graduate students and expands the opportunities for undergraduate students to be exposed to instruction at a more challenging level.