Graduate Program Frequently Asked Questions
(Prospective and New Student)
Log back into the ApplyYourself application to check if your application is complete and if a decision has been entered. If you don’t see a decision after several weeks, keep in mind the following:
- Your application could be incomplete. Check in ApplyYourself to make sure all required documents have been received.
- If you are a PhD applicant, we require a two-way match with a faculty member to be admitted (i.e. a faculty makes you an offer and you accept) or if you have external funding you can also potentially be admitted if you can find a faculty supervisor. If you haven’t communicated with any faculty and none have contacted you, you might want to email faculty who might be a good fit and find out if they’re looking for students. Your application will remain pending unless an offer is made and accepted and your application will be denied and closed at the end of the admission period (end of prior semester to the semester you’re applying for) if an offer wasn’t made to you.
- Most Master’s students who meet the Graduate School admission criteria should be admitted but international students may need to show they have funding for at least travel to the U.S. and the first year’s expenses because not much funding is available for Master’s students.
- All Master’s students that are admitted are admitted as non-thesis by default. If you find and confirm an advisor and research topic, you can be considered for admission into the M.S. Thesis Program.
Send scores using Institution Code 4853 (U Utah) Department Code 1502 (Mechanical Engineering).
- Log in to ApplyYourself
- Edit your Application
- On the Left Sidebar under Important Links, select Recommendations
- Check the email address. If it is correct, click Resend. If it is incorrect, delete the recommender and add a new recommender with the correct email address.
- Reach out to the ApplyYourself vendor’s technical support team. There is a link for technical support at the bottom of the main login page and at the top if an applicant is logged into the application.
- If the person is not receiving the email, you can try to get a different email address for your recommender and add a new recommender listing using the new email address and see if the request goes through.
- If nothing else works, contact us about alternative submission methods.
If your GPA or GRE scores (if required the semester you’re applying) are too low, domestic students may be invited to apply to the University as a non-matriculated student and re-apply to the graduate program for a future semester. You can take up to 9 credits as a non-matriculated student and transfer them to your degree with a B or higher (9 credits total can be transferred so if you already have some graduate credit this may not apply). If you want to re-apply for the next semester, we can just defer your current application and you will not need to fill out a new one. Contact the Director of Graduate Studies for more information.
If a faculty member wants to recommend you for admission, we may be able to admit you with lower GPA or GRE than required on an appeal. Contact Director of Graduate Studies for more information if you have a faculty member interested in hiring you in their lab.
You can also retake the GRE to try to get a higher score, if it’s required for the semester you’re applying for (currently optional for 2021 and 2022 due to COVID-19).
You should have received an email from the Admissions Office notifying you of your admissions offer. To accept the offer and begin the enrollment process, please complete the following steps:
- Log in to ApplyYourself
- At the bottom of the page, click link for Decision Status Available
- Open and view the letter
- Click the link at the bottom of the letter and fill out required info
- Assistantships (to obtain, contact faculty with whom you share common research interests and attempt to get one of them to sponsor you in their lab)
- Teaching Assistantship (TA) – TA positions are available primarily to MS Thesis and PhD students. These awards are determined by the recommendation of a faculty sponsor. Once admitted, MS Non-Thesis students can apply through our TA database and upload a resume so that professors can view and select qualified applicants for their courses.
- Research Assistantship (RA) – RA positions are available to MS Thesis and PhD students only. These positions are by recommendation of a professor and are awarded during admissions.
- Graduate Fellowships (GF) – GFs are by nomination and are typically given to PhD candidates. GFs usually perform the work of RAs.
- Scholarships
All incoming international students must provide proof of financial responsibility in order to be accepted to the University of Utah (can include RA funding from faculty). Please visit International Graduate Admissions for more details. In order to receive a tuition benefit for a TA position, graduate students whose first language is not English must be certified by the International Teaching Assitant (ITA) Program prior to beginning their assignment. This program is offered through The Graduate School and begins with an evaluation of spoken English for admission to an ITA workshop. The workshop is designed to facilitate ITA’s acquisition of skills in oral English and cultural awareness of higher education in the United States.
Students who are not cleared before the semester begins will be ineligible to receive a tuition benefit under the TA job code. Work as an RA or GA does not require the ITA clearance; however, we highly encourage all international students to participate in an ITA workshop. You must be recommended by the Department of Mechanical Engineering in order to attend the ITA workshop. Priority is given first to students already on campus, then to students who submitted all application materials by the December 1 deadline.
A department-specific new student orientation is available to all students typically the first week of classes but is optional. This orientation typically lasts 2-3 hours.
To view the assigned registration date, log in to the Campus Information Services, click on the “Registration” tile on your Student Homepage, and then click on the “View Your Registration Dates’ link. For more detailed information, see our View Your Registration Dates Tutorial (PDF).
Newly admitted students register fairly late compared to current students but for your second semester on, you will register on the first 1-2 days of the published registration period.
For a listing of classes available by semester, see the Class Schedule.
Here’s a tutorial about how to add a class.
Here’s a tutorial about how to drop a class.