Maryland · 9 Schools
AdvocatED advises students and families at 9 colleges and universities in Maryland. Every school has its own policy, committee structure, and evidence standard, and we know yours.
AdvocatED works with students and families at 9 colleges and universities in Maryland. That includes 7 public universities, 2 private universities. Among these, 2 with medical schools or separate professional-standards processes; 1 with law school honor codes distinct from the general conduct process; 2 that run a dedicated honor code or honor council rather than a standard conduct office. Every Maryland school sets its own procedures, evidence standards, advisor rights, and appeal timelines. Generic advice does not translate cleanly between them. AdvocatED's advisors know the specific process at your school, and cases in Maryland often turn on procedural details that are not obvious without deep familiarity with that institution.
Each school below has a deep-researched guide covering its specific committee structure, evidence standard, and appeal pathway.
AdvocatED works with students at these institutions on a per-case basis. Contact us for help with any of them.
AdvocatED currently advises students and families at 9 institutions in Maryland. That includes 7 public universities, 2 private universities. We also work with students at schools not currently listed individually on this site. Contact us regardless of where your student attends.
In most cases, no. University conduct proceedings follow institutional policy, not state or federal court procedure. What matters is someone who understands how your specific Maryland school's process actually works. Evidence standards, advisor rights, timelines, and appeal pathways all vary by institution. An education advocate typically provides stronger, more targeted guidance than a general-practice attorney, at a fraction of the cost. Legal representation is usually only needed if criminal charges are running in parallel.
Yes. Maryland has 2 schools with medical or other health-sciences programs and 1 schools with law school honor codes. Professional school proceedings are almost always separate from the general university process. Findings carry licensure or bar-admission implications, which makes the stakes meaningfully higher. Remediation, appeal grounds, and timelines all differ from the undergraduate pathway. If you are a professional student, make sure you are using the right process from day one.
2 Maryland institutions route academic integrity cases through an honor code, honor council, or honor court rather than a conventional dean-of-students office. Honor systems are often student-run, apply higher evidence standards (sometimes "clear and convincing" or "beyond a reasonable doubt" rather than "preponderance"), and can carry distinctive sanction frameworks including, in rare cases, a single-sanction policy of permanent dismissal. See our honor code violation guide for how these systems differ from standard conduct processes.
Most Maryland schools give students 5 to 10 business days to respond to allegations, with similar windows for filing appeals after a decision. Missing these deadlines usually eliminates procedural options that are otherwise available. If you have received a notice of alleged misconduct from a Maryland institution, calendar every date on the notice immediately and contact an advisor before you respond in writing.
Yes. Title IX cases in Maryland run under federal regulations but are administered by each school's Title IX office, which operates separately from the general conduct process. Timelines, cross-examination rules, and appeal grounds under Title IX differ from general misconduct. If you are a respondent in a Title IX case at a Maryland school, do not conflate the procedures, and do not file a written response before reviewing the notice with someone who knows the specific process at your institution.
Other situation-specific guides that often apply to the same case.
Get your free case review today. We respond quickly and prioritize urgent cases, because deadlines do not wait.