Policy Change Relaxes Grade Exclusion Requirements for Returning Students
Lake Land College Board of Trustees Meeting | Dec. 8, 2025
Article Summary: Trustees voted to reduce the waiting period required for students to apply for grade exclusion, lowering the threshold from five years to two years. The policy change is designed to remove barriers for students returning to college after a break.
Grade Exclusion Policy Key Points:
-
New Timeline: Students now only need to be non-enrolled for two years, down from five, to be eligible for grade exclusion.
-
Requirements: Returning students must complete 12 semester hours with a GPA of 2.0 or higher to qualify.
-
Strategic Goal: The change aligns with the college’s motto, “Education that fits your life.”
The Lake Land College Board of Trustees on Monday, Dec. 8, 2025, approved a revision to Board Policy 06.54, significantly reducing the time a student must be away from the college before they can wipe poor grades from their GPA calculation.
Under the previous policy, students had to be non-enrolled for five consecutive years before applying for grade exclusion. The revised policy reduces this requirement to two years.
Dr. Ikemefuna Nwosu, Vice President for Academic Services, told the board that the change removes “unnecessary barriers” and better aligns Lake Land’s policy with other institutions.
“More importantly, this change also reflects our strategic motto of ‘Education that fits your life’ — by offering a more flexible, student-centered policy,” Nwosu said.
The board waived the second reading of the policy to ensure the changes appear in the 2026-2028 catalog.
Latest News Stories
Pritzker touts EV plant in Normal, Bailey says taxpayers bear the burden
State Supreme Court hears arguments over Uber forced arbitration
Vance defends DOJ’s nearly $1.8B ‘weaponization’ fund
Vance highlights ‘progress’ in Iran negotiations, floats additional fighting
Experts: Republican bills offer little data privacy protection, override state laws
NAACP asks Black university athletes in 7 states to boycott
Tillis to Hegseth: Choose meritocracy over your mediocre yes-men
Chicago committee approves $5M for public school project
Group files federal lawsuit against Illinois’ gun owner ID law
Feds push back on Minnesota prosecution of ICE agent
Minnesota mobile voting push stalls as session ends
Taxpayers fund factories Pentagon says contractors should build