POLICIES AND PROCEDURES OF DOCTORAL PROGRAM
1. Full-time Status
Students who have not yet advanced to G4 status (i.e. who have completed fewer than
24 graduate-level credits) are required to register for 12 credits in order to maintain
full-time status. Full-time enrollment for students who have achieved G4 status is
9 credits. Students acting as teaching assistants must carry at least 9 credits (including,
if possible, the 3-credit Supervised Teaching, HIS 581). After advancing to candidacy,
the sutdent must register for 9 credits of dissertation research (HIS 699, 700, 701)
each semester until the degree is awarded in order to remain on full-time status.
2. Award of Master's Degree to Doctoral Students
Doctoral students who have completed the requirements for the master's degree may
petition the Graduate School to be awarded the master's degree while continuing in
the doctoral program.
3. Foreign Language
All students, including Americanists, must demonstrate proficiency in at least one
relevant foreign language before being advanced to PhD candidacy. This is a Graduate
School requirement that may not be waived, with the exception of students who are
native speakers in the language of their field of specialization. Minimal proficiency
in a language means the ability to translate a given passage clearly and accurately
with the aid of a dictionary. Relevant language(s) are determined by the student's
area of specialization. Proficiency may be demonstrated either through a written exam
administered by the department or a satisfactory grade in a graduate language course
(e.g., French 500). The in-department exam consists of translating a passage from
a scholarly work in History, with the aid of a dictionary. It is administered and
evaluated by an appropriate faculty member. The results of the Language Exam must
be reported to the department's Graduate Program Coordinator and entered into the
student's file.
At the discretion of the Advisor, a student may be required to study additional languages
as part of his or her degree program. It is the student's responsibility to establish
with her or his Advisor which foreign languages are necessary for the completion of
the PhD and to make sure they have completed the language requirement in a timely
fashion so that they may advance to candidacy. Ideally, students take their written
language exams by the Fall semester of Year 3.
4. Oral Examination
By the end of Year 2, each student should name a PhD Advisor (a History Department
faculty member who has agreed to serve as the student's dissertation advisor) and,
in consultation with that advisor, name two additional faculty members or affiliates
who agree to serve on his/her Oral Exam Committee. This team will help the student
define his or her examination fields, language requirements, and course work, as well
as monitor the student’s progress towards the dissertation.
Oral Exams are intended to evaluate students' mastery of their fields, emphasizing readings done as part of their course work and/or in preparation for a potential dissertation subject. To prepare for Orals, students shall, in consultation with each of their committee members, compile a reading list for each of their fields; most students have 3 fields (including at least one with a geographical focus; others can be thematic). Each list should include 25-35 books or equivalent in articles (3 articles=book), for a grand total of 75-105 books. Committee members must approve their respective lists no later than the middle of the semester that precedes the PhD oral examination.
The Oral Exam can be scheduled only after all University and History Department requirements have been met, including the Foreign Language Requirement and all necessary coursework (except Prospectus). Students should check with Roxanne Fernandez, our Graduate Coordinator, well in advance to make sure their records are up-to-date and to process the paperwork. A list of the student's Oral Exam Committee must be submitted to and approved by the Graduate Director at least 3 weeks prior to the exam.
The student, in consultation with the examination committee, will arrange the day, time, and place of the Oral Exam. The Oral Exam usually lasts about 2 hours and is graded as "pass with distinction," "pass," "weak pass," or "fail." Students who fail the Oral Exam may petition to take the exam a second time at a future date.
5. Dissertation Prospectus Workshop and Advancement to Candidacy
Required for PhD students at or near the end of their course work, this workshop focuses
on helping each participant prepare an outstanding dissertation proposal. It is usually
taken the Spring of Year 3. The workshop meets weekly and revolves around group exercises,
writing assignments, and development of key areas of the prospectus (research agenda,
historiography survey, approach and methodology, preliminary arguments, source base,
and scholarly interventions). The course concludes with student presentations to the
entire department. Prior to presentations, each student must receive written approval
of their Prospectus from their Advisor and other committee members. Passing Orals
and a satisfactory course grade in the Prospectus Workship are required for advancement
to candidacy.
6. Dissertation Committee
Upon nearing completion of the dissertation, the doctoral student constitutes a four-person Dissertation Defense Committee including their Advisor, two other faculty members or affiliates, and one “outside reader” (i.e. faculty from another department or university). The Ph.D. student should meet or correspond with their Advisor—at least once a semester—to discuss progress on their dissertation. In the rare case that a change of Advisor is necessary, the student may request another faculty member in the History Department to serve as their new Advisor; the student may not advance to candidacy, however, until the new Advisor has officially agreed to serve.
7. Dissertation and Defense
The dissertation is the basic requirement for the conferral of the PhD. Following
advancement to candidacy, students are required to enroll for one credit of dissertation
research each semester (whether through HIS 699, HIS 700, or HIS 701, depending on
each student's location) until the dissertation defense. Teaching assistants must
register for 9 credits of Dissertation Research on Campus (HIS 699).
Prior to scheduling the defense, the student must recieve advance approval for their
Dissertation Committee from the Graduate School. All necessary paperwork should be
submitted to the Graduate Program Coordinator well in advance. The form for the defense
(same as that used for Oral Exams) is available from the Graduate Program Coordinator
and must be submitted to the Graduate School by the 15th day of class during the semester
when the defense is to be scheduled.
At least 2 months before the scheduled dissertation defense, the student MUST deliver the entire dissertation to all Committee members to allow sufficient time for them to read and critique it. Committee members should promptly provide written feedback indicating any required revisions so the student has at least one month to address them. If they do not provide a written critique, the student can assume the dissertation is approved in the form submitted. The student must make all requested revisions and resolve any written objections to each committee member’s satisfaction prior to submitting the dissertation to the Graduate School. The defense is open to interested students and faculty. See Graduate School website for further information on deadlines and regulations concerning dissertation submission and scheduling of the dissertation defense.
8. Advising and Evaluation
When students are accepted into the graduate program, they are assigned a first-year
Advisor based on the areas of interest indicated by the student in his or her application.
Students may change Advisors with the permission of the Graduate Director, the new
Advisor, and the previous Advisor at the end of the first year or thereafter.
Advisors assigned to new doctoral students will meet with them to discuss program
requirements and the student's individual course of study, and they will meet with
their advisees on a regular basis as they progress through the program. Ideally, students
should consult with their Advisors about their course of study (including general
course selection, language requirements, and enrollment in courses outside the department)
at the beginning of each semester.
Evaluation of student performance takes place throughout the academic year (for example,
through grading of student work in graduate seminars), including at the end of each
semester, but most importantly through the end-of-year review. In this review, which
is held at the end of each Spring semester, faculty members meet to evaluate the progress
of all students in the graduate program. Evaluations of student performance will
focus on the strengths and weaknesses of the student and include suggestions for improvement.
The Graduate Director will be responsible for sending a written summary of the evaluation
to each student, with a request that the student contact his or her Advisor for further
details. All students will be ranked in one of the following three categories:
—Good Standing indicates satisfactory grades and timely completion of degree requirements.
—Some Concerns may reflect low grades in one or more courses, slow or intermittent
progress towards the degree (even if grades are acceptable), or areas or skills needing
special attention.
—Probation means unsatisfactory academic performance and/or progress towards the degree.
This departmental probation is independent of the rules for academic probation set
by the Graduate School. Specific steps will be set forth to be taken by students on
probation, including a timetable for fulfilling them, and failure to satisfy these
conditions may result in dismissal from the program. Students on departmental probation
whose academic performance remains unsatisfactory may be permitted to complete the
master's degree but asked not to continue towards the doctoral degree.
Students are encouraged to meet with their Advisors to discuss the results of this
annual assessment, and such meetings are mandatory for those students who are either
placed on probation or for whom some concerns are noted. The performance of students
who receive either of these ratings will be reevaluated at the end of the Fall semester.
For a complete description of departmental policies on evaluation, including probation
and dismissal, see here.
In recent years, the Graduate School and the Department have cracked down on the problem
of Incomplete Coursework. Students are strongly discouraged from taking Incompletes
in their courses except in the case of pressing emergencies. The pressure of Incompletes
impairs one's ability to perform well in subsequent semesters, and Incompletes can
negatively affect a student's eligibility for financial aid. Graduate School regulations
require that all Incompletes be changed to letter grades within one calendar year
after the end of the term in which the course was originally taken; ideally, however,
they should be resolved much sooner.
The Graduate School has also instituted a strict policy concerning Time Limits for
completing the program as a whole. Students who do not defend their dissertation within
a seven-year period after they have advanced to G4 status (i.e., after they have acquired
24 graduate-level credits, usually at the end of their first year or, if they entered
the program with an MA degree, upon beginning the doctoral program) are required to
petition for a "Time Limit Extension" from the Graduate School. These petitions are
contingent on a "contract" that the student draws up with his/her advisor and the
Director of Graduate Studies for the completion and defense of the dissertation. Students
should bear this time frame in mind as they make plans for doing dissertation research
and writing.