Chemistry / Bachelor of Science to Master of Science in Chemistry/ 4+1 Program
Program: BS-CHEM-A
The Chemistry Department offers a Bachelor’s to Master’s 4+1 Program option for Lewis University undergraduate Chemistry majors. All qualified Chemistry majors may take advantage of this 4+1 Program option. The 4+1 Program option allows qualified undergraduates to complete the graduate MS in Chemistry in less time than would be possible if the two programs were taken separately. Nine graduate hours may be used both to complete the Bachelor’s degree (128 hours) and to satisfy specific course requirements for the Master’s program. The total number of required graduate credits (30) will remain the same. Students apply for admission to the 4+1 Program option by submitting both the department application form and the Block Tuition Exemption form to the Program Director of the MS in Chemistry when they reach senior status (complete 90 credits) and have achieved an overall GPA of 3.0. Qualified students approved for the 4+1 Program option may apply financial aid to graduate courses and are exempt from the 18-hour block in the semesters when they take these select graduate courses. With planning, the MS in Chemistry could be awarded within one year of graduating with the Bachelor’s degree. Students who take 9 credit hours of selected graduate courses in Chemistry in their senior year and earn a grade of “B” or better in each of those courses will have to complete only 21 more credit hours to earn the MS. Students accepted into this 4+1 Program option are required to apply for admission to the MS in Chemical Physics program.
Listed below are graduate courses in the MS in Chemistry program which students enrolled in the 4+1 Program option may take during their senior year. Listed next to each is the undergraduate course for which it substitutes.
A student in this 4+1 Program option may apply no more than 3 of these courses toward his or her undergraduate Bachelor of Science major in Chemistry:
CHEM 50100 Chemical Thermodynamics substitutes for CHEM 49800 Special Topics
CHEM 50200 Strategic Organic Chemistry substitutes for CHEM 40100 Advanced Organic Chemistry
CHEM 52000 Strategic Organic Chemistry substitutes for CHEM 42000 Advanced Chemical Laboratory Topics
CHEM 60100 Kinetics and Reaction Mechanisms substitutes for CHEM 40200 Topics in Organic Chemistry
CHEM 60500 Applied Spectroscopy substitutes for CHEM 49800 Special Topics
CHEM 62100 Materials Chemistry substitutes for CHEM 42100 Polymer Chemistry
CHEM 62300 Supramolecular Chemistry substitutes for CHEM 42200 Colloidal and Surface Chemistry
See
Baccalaureate-to-Masters Degree Program Guidelines for additional information.