The University Of South Carolina Aiken

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Jeremy Smith
" I am an athlete here at USC Aiken. The professors work well with me, and understand that I am going to miss class occasionally. They take time to explain to me the things I missed. USC Aiken is the place for me. "

- Jeremy Smith , Business Administration major

Students in Class
Did You Know?
USC Aiken has some of the best professional schools in South Carolina. All three - business, nursing, and education - have received the highest level of accreditation possible. This means more opportunities for you to learn from the best and brightest the University has to offer.

Dalisha Williams
"USC Aiken has the best faculty around! Professors and advisors really have your best interest in mind and will always work with you."

- Dalisha Williams, Middle School Education major

Aaron Doctor
"USC Aiken has so much to offer. Whether it’s Greek life, student activities, athletics, honor societies, or residential life, our campus is full of opportunities and ways to become involved."

- Aaron Doctor, Exercise and Sports Science major

John Ellis
"USCA has many different students from many different backgrounds, but one thing that ties us all together is the campus atmosphere. When I left high school I was scared that I was not going to meet anyone that would be as good as my friends back home. Within my first couple of days at USCA, I had more friends than I have ever had before."

- John Ellis, Communications major

TJ Langford
"During the course of my freshman and sophomore years, I was a resident in the Pacer Downs. When I first met my roommate my freshman year, we became the best of friends from the get-go. We found out that we were so much alike in many ways. We connected like brothers, and we are still roommates today during our junior year. "

- Anthony (T.J.) Langford, Communications major

TJ Johnston
"Getting involved in Greek Life and participating in intramural sports is a great way to meet new people. I have participated in every intramural sport offered, and it has helped me stay active. "

- TJ Johnston, Business Marketing major

Chris Brown
"Working on campus is a great opportunity for students at USC Aiken. You have the chance to meet so many faculty and staff members and see what happens behind the scenes here at school. Your job will also work around your class schedule because they always put academics first. "

- Chris Brown, Fine Arts major

Kelsey LopezdeVictoria
"I love living in the Honors housing here at USCA. Just living on campus makes participating in university events and activities that much easier. Living in the honors wing is an added bonus because it keeps me in close proximity with like-minded students who are committed to succeeding and in turn inspire me to reach my fullest potential. The atmosphere is great for learning."

- Kelsey LopezdeVictoria, Biology and Psychology double major

Jessica Walters
"Through the wide variety of classes and clubs, USCA offers a little something for everyone. Its small class sizes, charm, and personal professors make it the perfect choice."

- Jessica Walters, Nursing major

Thomas Mcleod
"As a sophomore at USCA, I have really enjoyed the college classroom setting. Since the class sizes aren’t too big, I can always get help from professors anytime I’m in need."

- Thomas Mcleod, Exercise and Sports Science major

Alyssa Gadsden
"Attending USC Aiken has been a great experience for me. From the campus events to classes and to housing, we are a like a family – a home away from home."

- Alyssa Gadsden, Chemistry major

Alesha Jones
"I love attending USC Aiken because I feel as if am in a family oriented environment. What I love most about is its location, the independence you gain from attending, and our Pacer spirit!"

- Alesha Jones, Communications major

Dana Hallat
"I never thought I would meet people from all around the world on such a small campus. You can find the best of both worlds: the advantages of a big campus in a small, friendlier environment."

- Dana Hallat, Biology (pre-dental) major

USC Aiken News

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How to Register Using VIP

Springtime on USCA Campus
USCA Banner
Pacers Baseball Team
Pacers Baseball
Pacers Basketball
Pacers Basketball
Basketball Court in Convocation Center
Chemistry Student
Chemistry Student
USCA Convocation Center Lobby
Krystle Duckett
Fountain in the Quad
Graduation
Computer Keyboard
Dr. Chad Leverette
Pacers Logo
Pickens-Salley House Plaque
Chemistry
Annie Zhao
Students Walking to Class
Students Walking to Class
Students in the Quad
Studying on the Swing
Sunset
USCA Baseball Cap
Students Waiting for Class to Start
USCA Weathervane
Weight Training
Taking Notes During Class

 

Registration for Maymester, Summer I, Summer II, and Fall 2009: 

Maymester:  Friday, May 8th - 9:00am - 5:00pm

Summer I:  Thursday, May 28th - 1:00pm - 5:00pm

Summer II:  Thursday, July 2nd - 1:00pm - 5:00pm

Fall:  

Orientation #1- July 15th & 16th

Orientation #2 - July 29th & 30th

Orientation #3 - August 16th - 18th

 

Jump To:

[ Before You Register... ] [ Registration ] [ Other Information ]


Register Online - Not Inline! Use VIP!

All students who attend University of South Carolina campuses can now register for classes via the Visual Information Processing (VIP) site in addition to accessing other information. Visit the VIP site to see what really neat stuff you can do. In addition to registration, here is a list of other transactions that can be completed using VIP:

  • Obtaining your appointment time for registration.
     
  • Changing your PIN.
     
  • Obtaining a copy of your schedule.
     
  • Changing your schedule.
     
  • Processing your tuition bill - fee payment is available using a credit card (A non-refundable convenience fee will be charged for the use of a credit card for payment).
     
  • Applying awarded financial aid to your tuition bill.
     
  • Obtaining your exam schedule.
     
  • Obtaining your grades.
     
  • Obtaining an unofficial transcript.
     
  • Changing your address

The VIP address is VIP.SC.EDU.

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Before you register...

Know Your PIN (Personal Identification Number)

Each student has a four-digit Personal Identification Number (PIN). PINs are required to logon to VIP to access grades, registration, appointment times, and fee payment. All new students will have a provisional PIN assigned. This provisional PIN is a randomly generated four-digit number and needs to be claimed by the student. The provisional PIN can be claimed by the student by providing a positive method of identification. 

There are three ways a student may provide positive identification:
1.      An online process by which the student verifies his/her identity and receives the provisional PIN at the email address provided on the application for admission, or the University e-mail address. This process is available on VIP at https://vip.sc.edu/pinreset.html
2.      An in-person process by which the student presents a photo ID to a staff member in the Records Office, Room 109 of the Penland Administration Building. The provisional PIN will be forwarded to the e-mail address the student has provided.
3.      A Mail-in/Fax-in process by which the student may download and complete/sign the request to reset the VIP PIN. A copy of a picture ID is also required with this request. The web address to access this request form is http://registrar.sc.edu/pdf/pin_reset.pdf. The provisional PIN will be forwarded to the e-mail address the student has provided.
 
If a student forgets his/her PIN, the PIN may be reset by using any of the above options.

Advisement

For all students wishing to receive a degree from USC Aiken, ADVISEMENT IS REQUIRED. If you attempt to bypass this crucial step, the computer will automatically block your registration until you have been advised.

If you do not know your advisor's name or if you wish to change advisors, please contact the Academic Success Center. You may call the office at (803) 641-3297 or 278-1967 ext. 3297.

IT IS YOUR RESPONSIBILITY TO MAKE AN APPOINTMENT WITH YOUR ADVISOR.

Some faculty advisors have been trained in Faculty Desktop Registration (FDR) and will be able to register you for your classes in his/her office at the time of your advisement appointment.

During your advisement session, make sure your advisor does the following:

  • Gives you several alternate classes (not simply different times of the same class) to use just in case some of your first choices are not available.
     
  • Checks to make sure you are not taking 18 or more hours. If you are, you need to make sure you are given permission for an overload on a Course Authorization Form.
     
  • Checks to make sure none of the courses you plan to take require special permission. If any of them do, make sure the instructor of the course (in some cases the school dean/department chair) has given you permission on a Course Authorization Form.

Keep your copy of the advisement form. Some advisors will notify the Academic Success Center that your advisement for the upcoming semesters has been completed, and the "advisement hold" will be removed from the computer. Or, your advisor may ask you to take the pink copy of the advisement form to the Academic Success Center, so your "advisement hold" can then be removed.

If you are a non-degree student, the Academic Success Center will automatically remove your "advisement hold" so that you may proceed directly to the next step.

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Registration

The computer lab in B&E 238E will be available to access VIP for registration and the Registration Center in Room 109 of the Penland Administration Building also has computers available for VIP registration. A Problem Station will also be open in the Registration Center to process Course Overrides, Course Overloads, Special Permission Forms and Independent Study Contracts during Registration.

To Register using VIP

  • Access the VIP site at VIP.SC.EDU
     
  • Click on Login.
     
  • Enter your USC Student Identification Number - this is your Social Security Number.
     
  • Enter your PIN.
     
  • Click on Login
     
  • Click on the ACADEMICS tab.
     
  • Choose Course Registration for the appropriate term.
     
  • Add courses by typing in the appropriate schedule code OR do a search of schedule codes and/or Departments.
  • Print out your schedule.

Do not schedule two classes at the same time.

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Other Information

Finding an Open Section

When using VIP, if a class you have selected is closed, you will be able to view the open sections. You can then register for the open section of the class.

Dropping Classes

Drop unwanted classes before adding others to avoid a course overload.

You must drop classes you do not plan to attend. Instructors do not drop classes for students. If you do not drop a class, you may receive an "F." A WORD OF CAUTION - In the event that you should ever want to drop a course on VIP once classes start, you should always make sure you see your advisor for permission to drop that course. Should anything go wrong with your transaction, and occasionally these things do happen, that advisement form will be your only way to correct the situation and avoid receiving an "F." The pink copy of the advisement form should be taken to the Academic Success Center, then the student should complete the drop process by logging onto VIP and dropping the class(es).

Changing Sections

Drop the unwanted section before adding the new section. The system does not allow you to be registered for two sections of the same class.

Changing Credit to Audit

See "Sessions Deadlines" for each semester to find the deadline for changing from credit to audit.

Changing Audit to Credit

See "Sessions Deadlines" for each semester to find the deadline for this transaction.

Closed Sections, Special Permission, and Overloads

When a section of a class you want is closed and there is no other section or no other time you may take this course, you might want to talk with the school dean/department chair of that course about the possibility of an override. This simply means the person controlling that course will give you permission for the Registration Center to enter your name into the class.

Some courses requiring travel, a special project, or something not usually required by an instructor will be listed in the schedule as requiring special permission. This is usually available from the instructor.

An overload means you are trying to take 18 or more hours in a Fall or Spring semester or more than one course in a Maymester session. In order to do this, both your advisor and school dean/department chair must give approval.

Each of these three transactions must be recorded on a Course Authorization Form which the student will bring in person to the Registration Center where it will be entered manually by a member of the Records Staff. Course Authorization Forms are available from the school dean/department chair and/or instructor.

Independent Study/Internship Contracts

Prior to registering for an Independent Study course or an internship, you must complete an Independent Study Contract. Your instructor, your advisor, and school dean/department chair MUST sign the form. You may then take your approved copy of the form to the "problem station" at the Registration Center to have the course entered in the computer.

Pass/Fail Option

If you are an undergraduate, you must have the permission of your advisor and school dean/department chair to take a course pass/fail. The option may be elected or revoked no later than the last day for withdrawal with a "W" (see the chart in the "Sessions Deadlines" section). Pass/Fail forms are available in the Office of the Registrar, Room 109, Robert E. Penland Administration Building. The option is available only for free electives.

Auditing

Anyone wanting to audit classes must be admitted to the University and go through the usual registration process. Tuition for audited classes is the same as for classes taken for credit. Classes taken on an audit basis will appear on your official academic record even if you later withdraw from the course.

Auditing a course consists of attending classes and listening without responsibility for assignments or examinations. No credit may be earned in an audited course, by examination or otherwise. No audited course may be repeated for credit at a later date.

If you have registered for a course on an audit basis and wish to change your registration to take the course for credit or wish to change from credit to audit, you must do so no later than the last day of the drop/add period listed in the "Sessions Deadlines" section.

Concurrent and Transient Enrollment

Concurrent enrollment means attending USC Aiken and another University campus or another college at the same time. Transient enrollment means leaving USC Aiken for a semester or more to attend another USC campus or college.

Permission for either concurrent or transient enrollment is obtained on a "Request to Earn Credit through Special Enrollment Form" available from the Office of the Registrar. The student's advisor and the school dean/department chair must sign the form after which the form is returned to the Office of the Registrar where the form is processed. The Office of the Registrar will also confirm the USCA equivalent of each course taken in this manner based on transfer articulation tables developed by the Office of Admissions or as determined by the unit head of the academic area in which the course is housed. Students enrolling in concurrent or transient work at another USC campus can usually register for those classes in Aiken. Students wishing concurrent or transient enrollment at a college outside the USC system must remember the following:

  • Concurrent or transient enrollment outside the USC system within a student's last thirty hours is possible only after approval has been given on an Academic Petition. Students should allow approximately four weeks for all approvals on such petitions.
     
  • Courses outside the USC system transfer back to USC Aiken as "hours earned" only; therefore, they are not calculated into the GPA (unless the student is being considered for graduation with honors) and have no bearing on suspension or probation.

Schedule Adjustments and Dropping vs. Withdrawing

"Dropping" or "withdrawing" are two terms used in the Office of the Registrar that are often confusing. If you want to get out of one course, perhaps several courses, you must obtain advisor approval on an advisement form. You may enter this type of transaction on VIP; however, having that advisement form is your only means of correcting such a transaction if something should go wrong.

If you drop during the Schedule Adjustment period, the course(s) simply disappear from your schedule. If you drop during the next period, the grade of "W" will appear on your permanent record. This means that you dropped the class during the "Withdrawal" period, and this does not carry any academic penalty. The final period of each semester is the time in which you will receive a "WF" on your permanent record for any class you drop. A "WF" carries an academic penalty in that it is calculated just like an "F." The Academic Calendar as well as the "Sessions Deadlines" for a particular semester will give you the dates for these three periods.

"Withdrawing" from the University means you want to get out of all your classes for a semester, even if you are only taking one class. To withdraw from USC Aiken, you simply stop by the Records Office for the necessary withdrawal forms. We will even mail these to you if you like. The Schedule Adjustment period and the periods of "W" and "WF" all apply to withdrawing just as they do to dropping.

Cancellation of Classes Due to Non-Payment of Fees

The University requires that all students process the tuition bill every semester regardless of how your fees are actually paid. There is a deadline for bill processing in each semester's academic calendar -- know that date.

The University is not obligated to re-register you for the same classes you originally had. Process your bill, and don't take a chance on a less desirable schedule.

The Office of the Registrar has a final cancellation for non-payment after the period of schedule adjustments each semester. If you are involved in this final cancellation you will be expected to take the following steps if you wish to be re-registered:

  • Obtain written proof from your instructor(s) that you have been attending their class(es) and that they wish to have you re-registered. The Records Office will not re-register you without such permission.
     
  • Bring the written documentation to the Records Office. At that time you will be re-registered.
     
  • After you are re-registered, you will need to proceed to the Business Services Office to complete your bill processing. At that time, you will be assessed a reinstatement fee of $40.00 plus any additional late fees.

NOTE: This type of activity will only be done through a certain date of which you will be informed in your cancellation notice.

Cancelled Classes

If you are in a class that is cancelled, you will be contacted and given the opportunity to register for another class. You must still see your advisor and do this by the last day to register for that semester. If you do not add another class in the place of the canceled one, the Business Services Office will process any refund you may be due and mail it to you.

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