2018

Introduction

August 2014

Dear Newhouse Student:

Welcome to Syracuse University, the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications and the School of Information Studies. A University is a special place in which a community of scholars—teachers and students—work together toward common goals and in the process develop individual skills and talents. It is an environment where people are challenged to discover their potential and challenge others. It assumes certain freedoms with which come corresponding responsibilities.

As a new citizen of this community, you will have many different roles and responsibilities. In order to help you understand the academic expectations for this dual program, we have outlined your degree requirements and the Newhouse School Rules and Regulations in this handbook. You are responsible for knowing these requirements. In addition, the School of Information Studies will supplement this material with requirements for your Information Management and Technology major. The School of Information Studies may also have School rules which supplement the Newhouse rules contained in this publication.

We don’t expect you to digest all the requirements at once. You should focus at the outset on the Skills and Divisional Requirements. We will be reviewing the rest of the materials in advising sessions this fall. Some of the requirements described here may sound familiar to you since they were included in much less detail in the directions for your First-Term Enrollment this summer. Even if they sound familiar, please review these requirements once more.

You will not be without support in your academic pursuits. Academic advising at the Newhouse School includes your faculty adviser, your peer adviser, the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office, the Office of Student Affairs, and the Newhouse Career Development Center. You also have advisers in the School of Information Studies who will help you navigate the opportunities and requirements in that college.

You have already met your peer adviser. Peer advisers are volunteers who want to help new students. They are good students themselves, and they are knowledgeable about requirements and the University. While your peer adviser’s formal role ends after your first semester registration is complete, he or she is available to you as a resource throughout your first year, and you should not hesitate to contact your peer adviser. If you need help locating him or her, the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office can be of assistance (316 Newhouse 3, 443-4722).

One of the first relationships we hope you will establish at the University is with your faculty adviser. You have been assigned a faculty adviser to help you discover your interests and sort through your questions. If you are not certain who your adviser is, the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office (316 Newhouse 3) can help you. Also, your adviser is listed on MySlice under Advising Services on your SU portal. While you are required to see your faculty adviser at least once each semester before registration through your first and second year in the Newhouse School, you can see your adviser at any time during the semester. In fact, if you are in your first year, you are currently scheduled for an advising seminar–COM 100: Seminar for First-Year Students–which meets during the first few weeks of the fall semester. Through this seminar, you will have regular contact with your faculty adviser and a small group of Newhouse students and become better acquainted with opportunities within the School and the University. We think you will find this seminar a valuable beginning to your University experience.

In addition to your Seminar, advisers have weekly office hours which are posted in the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office, the Department offices (318 Newhouse 3), on the adviser’s office door, and under Advising Services on MySlice. If you have a conflict with your adviser’s posted office hours, you may contact him or her and request an appointment at a mutually convenient time. Advisers can also be reached by email.

As you discover more about what you would like to do professionally, you may decide to change your adviser to someone who can direct you more specifically in your area of interest. (You may change your adviser by filling out the appropriate form in the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office.) You will be assigned to an adviser in your major at the end of your sophomore year, if you have not chosen a major adviser before then.

As a junior or a senior, you will not be required to see your adviser for registration purposes, although you certainly should if you have questions. This choice is extended to juniors and seniors recognizing that most are well versed in their degree requirements. By extending this privilege, we are not encouraging you to see your adviser less frequently, but we are encouraging you to see your adviser more as a resource and not just as the source of a formal signature. We hope you will see your adviser for many reasons, such as discussing your electives, career goals, and internship opportunities. An adviser is a valuable contact who can help you academically and professionally if you take the time to meet with him or her regularly.

In the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office (room 316 Newhouse 3), you have a professional staff adviser who has been assigned to you. This Newhouse adviser will maintain your records and monitor your degree progress. He or she is an expert on degree requirements and School or University procedures and rules and can often answer your questions. A copy of your records is kept in this office. Before your senior year, you will be required to meet with your Newhouse professional adviser and have a DEGREE CHECK which will outline what you have left to complete to earn your Bachelor’s degree. At other times, if you feel uncertain about your requirements, you may request a copy of your check sheet to review with your adviser. The School of Information Studies also keeps a copy of your records pertaining to your Information Management and Technology major. You will be expected to consult with the advising office in 114 Hinds Hall at least once each semester before registering.

We supplement advising at Newhouse with group meetings on various topics. Some will be required; some will be recommended. You will get advising mailings from us with important information one or more times during the semester. It is very important that you keep your local address current and accurate on MySlice and that you check your SU email regularly.

Your faculty adviser, your peer adviser, your professional staff adviser, and our offices are all here to offer help and guidance. We hope you will take the initiative to seek help when you need it and to take advantage of the opportunities we have structured for you. As any senior will tell you, your four undergraduate years will go by very quickly. We hope you will take charge of your time and education at the outset and make each one of your forty-five or so courses contribute to your learning and growth by exploring areas of interest, venturing into unfamiliar terrain, and expanding your knowledge and skills. We wish you great success.

Sincerely,

Lorraine E. Branham

Dean

Rosanna Grassi

Associate Dean for Student Affairs

August 2015

Dear Newhouse Student:

Welcome to Syracuse University, the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications and the School of Information Studies. A University is a special place in which a community of scholars—teachers and students—work together toward common goals and in the process develop individual skills and talents. It is an environment where people are challenged to discover their potential and challenge others. It assumes certain freedoms with which come corresponding responsibilities.

As a new citizen of this community, you will have many different roles and responsibilities. In order to help you understand the academic expectations for this dual program, we have outlined your degree requirements and the Newhouse School Rules and Regulations in this handbook. You are responsible for knowing these requirements. In addition, the School of Information Studies will supplement this material with requirements for your Information Management and Technology major. The School of Information Studies may also have School rules which supplement the Newhouse rules contained in this publication.

We don’t expect you to digest all the requirements at once. You should focus at the outset on the Skills and Divisional Requirements. We will be reviewing the rest of the materials in advising sessions this fall. Some of the requirements described here may sound familiar to you since they were included in much less detail in the directions for your First-Term Enrollment this summer. Even if they sound familiar, please review these requirements once more.

You will not be without support in your academic pursuits. Academic advising at the Newhouse School includes your faculty adviser, your peer adviser, the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office, the Office of Student Affairs, and the Newhouse Career Development Center. You also have advisers in the School of Information Studies who will help you navigate the opportunities and requirements in that college.

You have already met your peer adviser. Peer advisers are volunteers who want to help new students. They are good students themselves, and they are knowledgeable about requirements and the University. While your peer adviser’s formal role ends after your first semester registration is complete, he or she is available to you as a resource throughout your first year, and you should not hesitate to contact your peer adviser. If you need help locating him or her, the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office can be of assistance (316 Newhouse 3, 443-4722).

One of the first relationships we hope you will establish at the University is with your faculty adviser. You have been assigned a faculty adviser to help you discover your interests and sort through your questions. If you are not certain who your adviser is, the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office (316 Newhouse 3) can help you. Also, your adviser is listed on MySlice under Advising Services on your SU portal. While you are required to see your faculty adviser at least once each semester before registration through your first and second year in the Newhouse School, you can see your adviser at any time during the semester. In fact, if you are in your first year, you are currently scheduled for an advising seminar–COM 100: Seminar for First-Year Students–which meets during the first few weeks of the fall semester. Through this seminar, you will have regular contact with your faculty adviser and a small group of Newhouse students and become better acquainted with opportunities within the School and the University. We think you will find this seminar a valuable beginning to your University experience.

In addition to your Seminar, advisers have weekly office hours which are posted in the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office, the Department offices (318 Newhouse 3), on the adviser’s office door, and under Advising Services on MySlice. If you have a conflict with your adviser’s posted office hours, you may contact him or her and request an appointment at a mutually convenient time. Advisers can also be reached by email.

As you discover more about what you would like to do professionally, you may decide to change your adviser to someone who can direct you more specifically in your area of interest. (You may change your adviser by filling out the appropriate form in the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office.) You will be assigned to an adviser in your major at the end of your sophomore year, if you have not chosen a major adviser before then.

As a junior or a senior, you will not be required to see your adviser for registration purposes, although you certainly should if you have questions. This choice is extended to juniors and seniors recognizing that most are well versed in their degree requirements. By extending this privilege, we are not encouraging you to see your adviser less frequently, but we are encouraging you to see your adviser more as a resource and not just as the source of a formal signature. We hope you will see your adviser for many reasons, such as discussing your electives, career goals, and internship opportunities. An adviser is a valuable contact who can help you academically and professionally if you take the time to meet with him or her regularly.

In the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office (room 316 Newhouse 3), you have a professional staff adviser who has been assigned to you. This Newhouse adviser will maintain your records and monitor your degree progress. He or she is an expert on degree requirements and School or University procedures and rules and can often answer your questions. A copy of your records is kept in this office. Before your senior year, you will be required to meet with your Newhouse professional adviser and have a DEGREE CHECK which will outline what you have left to complete to earn your Bachelor’s degree. At other times, if you feel uncertain about your requirements, you may request a copy of your check sheet to review with your adviser. The School of Information Studies also keeps a copy of your records pertaining to your Information Management and Technology major. You will be expected to consult with the advising office in 114 Hinds Hall at least once each semester before registering.

We supplement advising at Newhouse with group meetings on various topics. Some will be required; some will be recommended. You will get advising mailings from us with important information one or more times during the semester. It is very important that you keep your local address current and accurate on MySlice and that you check your SU email regularly.

Your faculty adviser, your peer adviser, your professional staff adviser, and our offices are all here to offer help and guidance. We hope you will take the initiative to seek help when you need it and to take advantage of the opportunities we have structured for you. As any senior will tell you, your four undergraduate years will go by very quickly. We hope you will take charge of your time and education at the outset and make each one of your forty-five or so courses contribute to your learning and growth by exploring areas of interest, venturing into unfamiliar terrain, and expanding your knowledge and skills. We wish you great success.

Sincerely,

Lorraine E. Branham

Dean

Rosanna Grassi

Associate Dean for Student Affairs

August 2016

Dear Newhouse Student:

Welcome to Syracuse University, the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications and the School of Information Studies. A University is a special place in which a community of scholars—teachers and students—work together toward common goals and in the process develop individual skills and talents. It is an environment where people are challenged to discover their potential and challenge others. It assumes certain freedoms with which come corresponding responsibilities.

As a new citizen of this community, you will have many different roles and responsibilities. In order to help you understand the academic expectations for this dual program, we have outlined your degree requirements and the Newhouse School Rules and Regulations in this handbook. You are responsible for knowing these requirements. In addition, the School of Information Studies will supplement this material with requirements for your Information Management and Technology major. The School of Information Studies may also have School rules which supplement the Newhouse rules contained in this publication.

We don’t expect you to digest all the requirements at once. You should focus at the outset on the Skills and Divisional Requirements. We will be reviewing the rest of the materials in advising sessions this fall. Some of the requirements described here may sound familiar to you since they were included in much less detail in the directions for your First-Term Enrollment this summer. Even if they sound familiar, please review these requirements once more.

You will not be without support in your academic pursuits. Academic advising at the Newhouse School includes your faculty adviser, your peer adviser, the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office, the Office of Student Affairs, and the Newhouse Career Development Center. You also have advisers in the School of Information Studies who will help you navigate the opportunities and requirements in that college.

You have already met your peer adviser. Peer advisers are volunteers who want to help new students. They are good students themselves, and they are knowledgeable about requirements and the University. While your peer adviser’s formal role ends after your first semester registration is complete, he or she is available to you as a resource throughout your first year, and you should not hesitate to contact your peer adviser. If you need help locating him or her, the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office can be of assistance (316 Newhouse 3, 443-4722).

One of the first relationships we hope you will establish at the University is with your faculty adviser. You have been assigned a faculty adviser to help you discover your interests and sort through your questions. If you are not certain who your adviser is, the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office (316 Newhouse 3) can help you. Also, your adviser is listed on MySlice under Advising Services on your SU portal. While you are required to see your faculty adviser at least once each semester before registration through your first and second year in the Newhouse School, you can see your adviser at any time during the semester. In fact, if you are in your first year, you are currently scheduled for an advising seminar–COM 100: Seminar for First-Year Students–which meets during the first few weeks of the fall semester. Through this seminar, you will have regular contact with your faculty adviser and a small group of Newhouse students and become better acquainted with opportunities within the School and the University. We think you will find this seminar a valuable beginning to your University experience.

In addition to your Seminar, advisers have weekly office hours which are posted in the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office, the Department offices (318 Newhouse 3), on the adviser’s office door, and under Advising Services on MySlice. If you have a conflict with your adviser’s posted office hours, you may contact him or her and request an appointment at a mutually convenient time. Advisers can also be reached by email.

As you discover more about what you would like to do professionally, you may decide to change your adviser to someone who can direct you more specifically in your area of interest. (You may change your adviser by filling out the appropriate form in the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office.) You will be assigned to an adviser in your major at the end of your sophomore year, if you have not chosen a major adviser before then.

As a junior or a senior, you will not be required to see your adviser for registration purposes, although you certainly should if you have questions. This choice is extended to juniors and seniors recognizing that most are well versed in their degree requirements. By extending this privilege, we are not encouraging you to see your adviser less frequently, but we are encouraging you to see your adviser more as a resource and not just as the source of a formal signature. We hope you will see your adviser for many reasons, such as discussing your electives, career goals, and internship opportunities. An adviser is a valuable contact who can help you academically and professionally if you take the time to meet with him or her regularly.

In the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office (room 316 Newhouse 3), you have a professional staff adviser who has been assigned to you. This Newhouse adviser will maintain your records and monitor your degree progress. He or she is an expert on degree requirements and School or University procedures and rules and can often answer your questions. A copy of your records is kept in this office. Before your senior year, you will be required to meet with your Newhouse professional adviser and have a DEGREE CHECK which will outline what you have left to complete to earn your Bachelor’s degree. At other times, if you feel uncertain about your requirements, you may request a copy of your check sheet to review with your adviser. The School of Information Studies also keeps a copy of your records pertaining to your Information Management and Technology major. You will be expected to consult with the advising office in 114 Hinds Hall at least once each semester before registering.

We supplement advising at Newhouse with group meetings on various topics. Some will be required; some will be recommended. You will get advising mailings from us with important information one or more times during the semester. It is very important that you keep your local address current and accurate on MySlice and that you check your SU email regularly.

Your faculty adviser, your peer adviser, your professional staff adviser, and our offices are all here to offer help and guidance. We hope you will take the initiative to seek help when you need it and to take advantage of the opportunities we have structured for you. As any senior will tell you, your four undergraduate years will go by very quickly. We hope you will take charge of your time and education at the outset and make each one of your forty-five or so courses contribute to your learning and growth by exploring areas of interest, venturing into unfamiliar terrain, and expanding your knowledge and skills. We wish you great success.

Sincerely,

Lorraine E. Branham 

Dean

Rosanna Grassi

Associate Dean for Student Affairs

August 2017

Dear Newhouse Student:

Welcome to Syracuse University, the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications and the School of Information Studies. A University is a special place in which a community of scholars—teachers and students—work together toward common goals and in the process develop individual skills and talents. It is an environment where people are challenged to discover their potential and challenge others. It assumes certain freedoms with which come corresponding responsibilities.

As a new citizen of this community, you will have many different roles and responsibilities. In order to help you understand the academic expectations for this dual program, we have outlined your degree requirements and the Newhouse School Rules and Regulations in this handbook. You are responsible for knowing these requirements. In addition, the School of Information Studies will supplement this material with requirements for your Information Management and Technology major. The School of Information Studies may also have School rules which supplement the Newhouse rules contained in this publication.

We don’t expect you to digest all the requirements at once. You should focus at the outset on the Skills and Divisional Requirements. We will be reviewing the rest of the materials in advising sessions this fall. Some of the requirements described here may sound familiar to you since they were included in much less detail in the directions for your First-Term Enrollment this summer. Even if they sound familiar, please review these requirements once more.

You will not be without support in your academic pursuits. Academic advising at the Newhouse School includes your faculty adviser, your peer adviser, the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office, the Office of Student Affairs, and the Newhouse Career Development Center. You also have advisers in the School of Information Studies who will help you navigate the opportunities and requirements in that college.

You have already met your peer adviser. Peer advisers are volunteers who want to help new students. They are good students themselves, and they are knowledgeable about requirements and the University. While your peer adviser’s formal role ends after your first semester registration is complete, he or she is available to you as a resource throughout your first year, and you should not hesitate to contact your peer adviser. If you need help locating him or her, the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office can be of assistance (316 Newhouse 3, 315-443-4722).

One of the first relationships we hope you will establish at the University is with your faculty adviser. You have been assigned a faculty adviser to help you discover your interests and sort through your questions. If you are not certain who your adviser is, the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office (316 Newhouse 3) can help you. Also, your adviser is listed on MySlice under Advising Services on your SU portal. While you are required to see your faculty adviser at least once each semester before registration through your first and second year in the Newhouse School, you can see your adviser at any time during the semester. In fact, if you are in your first year, you are currently scheduled for an advising seminar–COM 100: Seminar for First-Year Students–which meets during the first few weeks of the fall semester. Through this seminar, you will have regular contact with your faculty adviser and a small group of Newhouse students and become better acquainted with opportunities within the School and the University. We think you will find this seminar a valuable beginning to your University experience.

In addition to your Seminar, advisers have weekly office hours which are posted in the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office, the Department offices (318 Newhouse 3), on the adviser’s office door, and under Advising Services on MySlice. If you have a conflict with your adviser’s posted office hours, you may contact him or her and request an appointment at a mutually convenient time. Advisers can also be reached by email.

As you discover more about what you would like to do professionally, you may decide to change your adviser to someone who can direct you more specifically in your area of interest. (You may change your adviser by filling out the appropriate form in the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office.) You will be assigned to an adviser in your major at the end of your sophomore year, if you have not chosen a major adviser before then.

As a junior or a senior, you will not be required to see your adviser for registration purposes, although you certainly should if you have questions. This choice is extended to juniors and seniors recognizing that most are well versed in their degree requirements. By extending this privilege, we are not encouraging you to see your adviser less frequently, but we are encouraging you to see your adviser more as a resource and not just as the source of a formal signature. We hope you will see your adviser for many reasons, such as discussing your electives, career goals, and internship opportunities. An adviser is a valuable contact who can help you academically and professionally if you take the time to meet with him or her regularly.

In the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office (room 316 Newhouse 3), you have a professional staff adviser who has been assigned to you. This Newhouse adviser will maintain your records and monitor your degree progress. He or she is an expert on degree requirements and School or University procedures and rules and can often answer your questions. A copy of your records is kept in this office. Before your senior year, you will be required to meet with your Newhouse professional adviser and review your DEGREE AUDIT, which will outline what you have left to complete to earn your Bachelor’s degree. You are encouraged to meet with your staff adviser if you have questions or would like to review your degree requirements and plans. The School of Information Studies also keeps a copy of your records pertaining to your Information Management and Technology major. You will be expected to consult with the advising office in 114 Hinds Hall at least once each semester before registering.

We supplement advising at Newhouse with group meetings on various topics. Some will be required; some will be recommended. You will get advising mailings from us with important information one or more times during the semester. It is very important that you keep your local address current and accurate on MySlice and that you check your SU email regularly.

Your faculty adviser, your peer adviser, your professional staff adviser, and our offices are all here to offer help and guidance. We hope you will take the initiative to seek help when you need it and to take advantage of the opportunities we have structured for you. As any senior will tell you, your four undergraduate years will go by very quickly. We hope you will take charge of your time and education at the outset and make each one of your forty-five or so courses contribute to your learning and growth by exploring areas of interest, venturing into unfamiliar terrain, and expanding your knowledge and skills. We wish you great success.

Sincerely,

Lorraine E. Branham

Dean

Rosanna Grassi

Associate Dean for Student Affairs

August 2018

Dear Newhouse Student:

Welcome to Syracuse University, the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications and the School of Information Studies. A University is a special place in which a community of scholars—teachers and students—work together toward common goals and in the process develop individual skills and talents. It is an environment where people are challenged to discover their potential and challenge others. It assumes certain freedoms with which come corresponding responsibilities.

As a new citizen of this community, you will have many different roles and responsibilities. In order to help you understand the academic expectations for this dual program, we have outlined your degree requirements and the Newhouse School Rules and Regulations in this handbook. You are responsible for knowing these requirements. In addition, the School of Information Studies will supplement this material with requirements for your Information Management and Technology major. The School of Information Studies may also have School rules which supplement the Newhouse rules contained in this publication.

We don’t expect you to digest all the requirements at once. You should focus at the outset on the Skills and Divisional Requirements. We will be reviewing the rest of the materials in advising sessions this fall. Some of the requirements described here may sound familiar to you since they were included in much less detail in the directions for your First-Term Enrollment this summer. Even if they sound familiar, please review these requirements once more.

You will not be without support in your academic pursuits. Academic advising at the Newhouse School includes your faculty adviser, your peer adviser, the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office, the Office of Student Affairs, and the Newhouse Career Development Center. You also have advisers in the School of Information Studies who will help you navigate the opportunities and requirements in that college.

You have already met your peer adviser. Peer advisers are volunteers who want to help new students. They are good students themselves, and they are knowledgeable about requirements and the University. While your peer adviser’s formal role ends after your first semester registration is complete, he or she is available to you as a resource throughout your first year, and you should not hesitate to contact your peer adviser. If you need help locating him or her, the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office can be of assistance (316 Newhouse 3, 315-443-4722).

One of the first relationships we hope you will establish at the University is with your faculty adviser. You have been assigned a faculty adviser to help you discover your interests and sort through your questions. If you are not certain who your adviser is, the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office (316 Newhouse 3) can help you. Also, your adviser is listed on MySlice under Advising Services on your SU portal. While you are required to see your faculty adviser at least once each semester before registration through your first and second year in the Newhouse School, you can see your adviser at any time during the semester. In fact, if you are in your first year, you are currently scheduled for an advising seminar–COM 100: Seminar for First-Year Students–which meets during the first few weeks of the fall semester. Through this seminar, you will have regular contact with your faculty adviser and a small group of Newhouse students and become better acquainted with opportunities within the School and the University. We think you will find this seminar a valuable beginning to your University experience.

In addition to your Seminar, advisers have weekly office hours which are posted in the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office, the Department offices (318 Newhouse 3), on the adviser’s office door, and under Advising Services on MySlice. If you have a conflict with your adviser’s posted office hours, you may contact him or her and request an appointment at a mutually convenient time. Advisers can also be reached by email.

As you discover more about what you would like to do professionally, you may decide to change your adviser to someone who can direct you more specifically in your area of interest. (You may change your adviser by filling out the appropriate form in the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office.) You will be assigned to an adviser in your major at the end of your sophomore year, if you have not chosen a major adviser before then.

As a junior or a senior, you will not be required to see your adviser for registration purposes, although you certainly should if you have questions. This choice is extended to juniors and seniors recognizing that most are well versed in their degree requirements. By extending this privilege, we are not encouraging you to see your adviser less frequently, but we are encouraging you to see your adviser more as a resource and not just as the source of a formal signature. We hope you will see your adviser for many reasons, such as discussing your electives, career goals, and internship opportunities. An adviser is a valuable contact who can help you academically and professionally if you take the time to meet with him or her regularly.

In the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office (room 316 Newhouse 3), you have a professional staff adviser who has been assigned to you. This Newhouse adviser will maintain your records and monitor your degree progress. He or she is an expert on degree requirements and School or University procedures and rules and can often answer your questions. A copy of your records is kept in this office. Before your senior year, you will be required to meet with your Newhouse professional adviser and review your DEGREE AUDIT, which will outline what you have left to complete to earn your Bachelor’s degree. You are encouraged to meet with your staff adviser if you have questions or would like to review your degree requirements and plans. The School of Information Studies also keeps a copy of your records pertaining to your Information Management and Technology major. You will be expected to consult with the advising office in 114 Hinds Hall at least once each semester before registering.

We supplement advising at Newhouse with group meetings on various topics. Some will be required; some will be recommended. You will get advising mailings from us with important information one or more times during the semester. It is very important that you keep your local address current and accurate on MySlice and that you check your SU email regularly.

Your faculty adviser, your peer adviser, your professional staff adviser, and our offices are all here to offer help and guidance. We hope you will take the initiative to seek help when you need it and to take advantage of the opportunities we have structured for you. As any senior will tell you, your four undergraduate years will go by very quickly. We hope you will take charge of your time and education at the outset and make each one of your forty-five or so courses contribute to your learning and growth by exploring areas of interest, venturing into unfamiliar terrain, and expanding your knowledge and skills. We wish you great success.

Sincerely,

Lorraine E. Branham

Dean

Rosanna Grassi

Associate Dean for Student Affairs