Provisional admission definition

Provisional admission or “Provisional Renewal” means: conditional approval by a State Portal Entity of an Institution’s participation in SARA that carries additional monitoring conditions of that Institution by its Home State. See Sections 3.2 and 3.3 herein.
Provisional admission means that your admission to UC Santa Barbara will be official only after you have completed the requirements below. If you think you will not be able to meet the provisions of this contract, or if you do not understand the conditions, contact the Office of Admissions immediately for further advice.
Provisional admission or “provisional renewal” means conditional approval of an Institution’s participation in SARA that carries additional monitoring conditions;

Examples of Provisional admission in a sentence

  • Provisional admission may be granted to new graduates who are scheduled to take the NCLEX-RN.


More Definitions of Provisional admission

Provisional admission means an individual:
Provisional admission or “Provisional Renewal” means conditional approval by the Board staff of an institution’s participation in SARA that carries additional monitoring conditions of that institution by its Home State.
Provisional admission or “provisional renewal” means conditional approval of an Institution’s participation in ▇▇▇▇ that carries additional monitoring conditions;
Provisional admission means admission granted to a candidate provisionally in any program/course at the university, until his/her admission becomes final subject to the fulfillment of all the necessary requirements notified.
Provisional admission. - means an individual has been determined to be homeless or in imminent peril with major behavioral or medical issues. A provisional admission is expected to exceed 30 days, but no more than twelve (12) months. Community Services staff and the Interdisciplinary Team will develop a plan at the time the individual’s needs are stabilized and needed supports are available to return the person to a community placement. Examples include situations where a medical need has suddenly become more serious or requires more hours of care and support than can be provided in the community even after emergency medical supports are deployed; or situations