Ph.D. in Higher Education
Degree Requirements (90 cr.)
Major Requirements (36 cr.)
Core Courses (15 cr.)
- EDUC-C 620 Proseminar in Higher Education (3 cr.)
- EDUC-C 654 Higher Education in the United States (3 cr.)
- EDUC-C 664 Higher Education Organization and Administration (3 cr.)
- EDUC-C 750 Topical Seminar (3 cr.)
- EDUC-C 750 Topical Seminar (3 cr.)
Other Courses in the Major (15 cr.)
Select From:
- EDUC-C 655 Higher Education and Public Policy (3 cr.)
- EDUC-C 656 American Community Colleges (3 cr.)
- EDUC-C 661 Foundations of Institutional Research (3 cr.)
- EDUC-C 670 Problems in Financing Higher Education (3 cr.)
- EDUC-C 675 Supervised College Teaching (3 cr.)
- EDUC-C 678 Capstone in Institutional Research (3 cr.)
- EDUC-C 680 History of Higher Education and Philanthropy (3 cr.)
- EDUC-C 690 Independent Study in Higher Education (3 cr.)
- EDUC-C 695 Academic Problems in Higher Education (3 cr.)
- EDUC-C 705 Legal Aspects of Higher Education (3 cr.)
- EDUC-C 750 Topical Seminar (3 cr.)
- EDUC-C 760 Internship in Administration (3-6 cr.)
- EDUC-U 544 Introduction to Student Affairs Work in Higher Education (3 cr.)
- EDUC-U 546 Diverse Students on the College Campus (3 cr.)
- EDUC-U 548 Student Development Theory and Research (3 cr.)
- EDUC-U 549 Environmental Theory and Assessment (3 cr.)
Early Inquiry Experience and Inquiry Linkage in the Major (6 cr.)
EDUC-C 788 Seminar in Research in Higher Education (3 cr.)
Inquiry Linkage that should be taken near the end of program of study. This is a course in which research relevant to the major field of specialization is studied.
In the early inquiry course, a student carries out an actual research project, including the collection and analysis of data to answer a research question, and the writing of a research manuscript.
A course that the instructor designates as providing an early inquiry experience must meet the following criteria:
- There must be a written product as a result of the early inquiry experience.
- The product should be suitable for presentation and/or publication. This can include professional conferences or institutional presentations/publications.
- The syllabus of a Special Topics course will clearly state the requirements that must be completed to fulfill the early inquiry experience.
In most cases, the student should (a) take a course with an assignment the instructor designates as fulfilling the early inquiry experience (including some EDUC-C 750 Topical Seminar (3 cr.) or EDUC-C 678 Capstone in Institutional Research (3 cr.)
or (b) fulfill the requirement through Independent Study (EDUC-C 690).
Inquiry Core Requirements (12 cr.)
Core Inquiry Course (3 cr.)
- EDUC-Y 520 Strategies for Educational Inquiry (3 cr.) or EDUC-Y 521 Methodological Approaches to Educational Inquiry (3 cr.)
Although either EDUC-Y 520 or EDUCY 521 can meet this requirement, EDUC-Y 521 is highly recommended because it is intended for doctoral students.
Other Inquiry Courses (9 cr.)
Three additional inquiry courses approved by the Advisory Committee are required. Core Inquiry Courses for the School of Education shall include all Y-prefixed courses offered in the School of Education EXCEPT Y500, EDUC-Y 502, EDUC-Y 590, EDUC-Y 660, EDUC-Y 690, EDUC-Y 795, and EDUC-Y 799. Choose from this list of approved inquiry courses.
Three of the four required inquiry courses above should be taken prior to the qualifying exam.
Minor Requirements (12 cr.)
Course work should focus on the research and scholarship of an academic discipline that provides a useful perspective on the study of higher education. This perspective often influences the topic or methodology used in the dissertation. The minor may be any University Graduate School approved minor outside of the HESA program.
Alternatively, any twelve credits that form a single interdisciplinary minor may be approved by the University Graduate School. For this alternative, a faculty member from outside the higher education program (e.g., Sociology, Law, Educational Inquiry, Educational Policy, and Organizational Studies) must be a member of the student’s Advisory Committee. A Minor Justification form must be submitted and approved by the Graduate Studies Office.
Elective or Second Minor Requirements (15 cr.)
Fifteen hours can be used to further study an appropriate field, complete a second minor (minimum of 12 credit hours), or gain other professionally relevant knowledge. Excess hours in other sections may reduce the number of hours here.
Students are encouraged to enroll in six credit hours that provide a breadth of understanding of higher education as a field of study.
With Advisory Committee approval a student may use courses from other academic areas appropriate to research interests and professional objectives.
Dissertation Requirements (15 cr.)
- EDUC-C 795 Dissertation Proposal Preparation (3 cr.)
Should be taken near the end of program, after passing the qualifying exam - EDUC-C 799 Doctoral Thesis in Higher Education (12 cr.)
Students are required to design, conduct, and orally defend an original piece of research. Refer to the Graduate Bulletin checklist of doctoral program milestones and other program resources for further details.
Additional Program Requirements
Pre-Requisite
EDUC-Y 502 Intermediate Statistics Applied to Education (3 cr.) or its equivalent is required as a pre-requisite for the Ph.D. If the course has not been taken prior to admittance to the program, it may be taken post-admission and be counted among electives.
First Year Review
At the end of the first year (or after 18 credit hours of course work for those not enrolled full time), doctoral students must participate in the First-Year Review process. Instructions for this review can be found on the HESA web site. The advisor will assess performance to date and future program plans. The focus of the review is assessing a student’s ability to: 1) clearly articulate thoughts and ideas in an organized manner (written and orally), 2) analyze and synthesize research in order to formulate an opinion or argument, and 3) successfully complete program requirements, including the dissertation.