Admission to the Junior College
New cadets are admitted only at the beginning of the Fall and Spring semesters at New Mexico Military Institute.
NOTE: NMMI reserves the right to admit those candidates it determines to be best qualified for entrance.
In some cases, a candidate with an acceptable score (NM is 45) on the General Education Development (GED) examination may be accepted.
Those cadets seeking a commission should also refer to the section for admissions requirements into the Contract Senior ROTC Program leading to the US Army Reserve Commission.
Foreign cadets whose primary language is not English must have a score of 500 (paper based test) or 173 (computer) or 61 (internet based) in the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), and may substitute these tests for the ACT.
New Mexico General Education Transfers (HED)
During the 2005 New Mexico Legislative session, Senate Bill 161, consistent with the requirements of state law, was signed into law to further enhance and facilitate the articulation of general education courses among New Mexico’s colleges and universities. Designated general education core course, successfully completed at any regionally accredited public institution of higher education in New Mexico are guaranteed to transfer to any New Mexico public institution.
The core matrix of approved courses guaranteed to transfer and meet general education requirements can be found on the New Mexico Higher Education Department website http://hed.state.nm.us and follow the colleges and universities link to the drop down menu for transferring credits and core matrix.
This is the current listing of NMMI courses to the New Mexico Common Course Numbering (NMCCN System). This system facilitates the articulation of coursework through a set of uniform course designations.
The NMCCN is a four alpha prefix that identifies the subject area and then four digits each having a specific meaning. The first digit represents the course level (1 - freshman, 2 - sophomore etc.), the next two represent the sequence of the course, while the last represents the credit hours assigned to the course.
For example: ENGL 1113 is the general freshmen composition course required at all schools. A course of ENGL 1093 would be a lower level college level course, while ENGL 0113 would be a developmental English course.
Over the next few years NMMI will convert all course numbers to the NMCCN course number or place a course in its proper sequence in that schema. The General Education Common Core is 35 semester hours.
Junior College Curriculum
The core curriculum requirements generate essentially a liberal arts associate degree, but by careful selection of elective courses, a cadet can build a course sequence, which parallels those in other institutions that lead to the bachelor’s degree. Cadets’ academic advisors will counsel their advisees on other institutions’ requirements for undergraduate degrees and suggest NMMI courses which parallel those sequences. Except at four-year institutions that do not sponsor ROTC programs, virtually all NMMI credit producing courses may count towards the 128-140 semester graduation total which most colleges require for the bachelor’s degree. However, as is increasingly becoming common, many bachelor’s degrees require 10 semesters to complete. All graduates are required to complete the CAAP assessment in their last semester. A student may not take more than 4.0 credits in PHEA or 8.0 credits in MUSC activity courses that will count towards graduation.
Normal Class Loads
The normal academic load for college cadets is 17 semester credit hours. The minimum load is 12 semester credit hours.
Overloads
Cadets with a 3.0 GPA or above from the previous grading period may take more than 19 credit hours The advisor may authorize a course load of up to 19 hours, and the Advisor’s Associate Dean may authorize a course load of 20-21 hours. Only the Academic Dean may authorize a course load of 23 or more hours. Overloads are not recommended for a cadet with a GPA of less than 3.0 from the previous semester grading period. Upon the cadet’s request and with the recommendation of the academic advisor, an overload may be authorized if the cadet’s schedule (academic, athletic, extra-curricular) suggests that there is reasonable probability that the cadet can successfully handle the overload.
College Distance Learning Courses
Correspondence/on-line/distance courses must meet the following criteria:
- Cadet must take the course at NMMI if offered
- If the cadet cannot schedule the required class in the last semester of the graduation year, the cadet can request a correspondence or on line course
- A cadet may take a correspondence/on-line course if the course is not offered in the curriculum, and must receive the Dean’s permission prior to enrolling in the course
- On-line courses must have a mandatory valid login.
Course Numbering
NMMI is converting all junior college courses to a 4-letter and 4-number sequence to make college courses significantly different from the 3-letter and 3-number sequence of high school courses. For example college English would be ENGL 1113 and high school senior English would be ENG 041 or 042.
Requirements