Ho Chi Minh City University of Law has just announced the list of students in regular classes expected to be given academic warning and forced to drop out of school due to poor academic results in the second semester of the 2023-2024 school year.
Accordingly, 41 students are expected to be forced to leave school because they have been given two consecutive academic warnings. 75 students are expected to be given academic warnings because of poor academic performance in the second semester of the 2023-2024 school year.
According to Ho Chi Minh City University of Law, students are given academic warnings based on a number of conditions such as the total number of credits not achieved in the semester exceeding 50% of the registered credits in the semester, or the total number of credits outstanding from the beginning of the course exceeding 24 credits; The average semester score is below 0.80 for the first semester of the course, below 1.0 for the following semesters; The cumulative average score is below 1.2 for first-year students, below 1.4 for second-year students, below 1.6 for third-year students or below 1.8 for students in the following years.
Students are forced to drop out of school if they receive two consecutive academic warnings or their study time exceeds the prescribed limit.
Previously, at the end of September 2024, Ho Chi Minh City University of Technical Education also announced that it planned to issue academic warnings and expel more than 1,000 students due to poor academic performance. Of these, 964 students from the 2021, 2022, and 2023 courses were expected to receive academic warnings due to poor results in the second semester of the 2023-2024 school year. All of these students had an average semester score of <1.
There are 88 students expected to be forced to drop out of school because they have 2 consecutive semesters (semesters 1-2 of the 2023-2024 school year) with an average semester score <1 or have not achieved the required number of credits.
In addition, Ho Chi Minh City University of Technical Education announced that 892 students of the 2021, 2022, and 2023 courses are expected to have their academic results challenged due to credit debt and poor cumulative grade point average.