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The Department of Communication offers three graduate degrees: the Master of Arts, the Online Master of Science in Health Communication, and the Doctor of Philosophy. 

 

Master of Arts

Study for the master's degree takes students beyond undergraduate work in both scope and depth to meet a variety of interests. Some M.A. students aspire to positions in business, in government, or in teaching, while others see the master's degree as one stage on the road to a doctoral program.

Completion of the M.A. program of study requires a minimum of thirty-two hours of graduate credit. For a student holding a half-time assistantship, thirty-two hours can be completed in two semesters plus a summer session (though most students take more time than this). The program may include eight hours in courses outside the department. Each candidate builds an individualized program with the counsel of an adviser chosen by the student or assigned by the Director of Graduate Study.

Each candidate must pass a final comprehensive examination prepared and supervised by the adviser and the candidate's examination committee based primarily on courses taken. A master's thesis is optional.

Students in the M.A. program who wish to continue in the Ph.D. program must apply to do so. Admission to the Ph.D. program is not automatic but rather is based on evaluation of the student's total record including performance in the master's program and recommendations from department faculty.

 

Doctor of Philosophy

Doctoral programs exist to train research scholars, and the Ph.D. degree is awarded to persons who have demonstrated a capacity for making a contribution to knowledge. This does not mean, however, that everyone who earns a doctoral degree becomes an academic. The Ph.D. programs in the Department of Communication are designed to prepare persons both for college and university teaching and for those other professions where extensive knowledge of theory and research concerning communication is needed. The department trains persons for research and teaching within most of the major domains of the study of human communication, as discussed above, but there are no fixed 'tracks' to constrain a student's definition of a field of interest. Each Ph.D. candidate plans an individual program of study and research with the help of an adviser and a program planning committee.

In brief, the main requirements for the Ph.D. degree are: (1) the successful completion of a program of coursework designed by the students, a faculty adviser, and a program planning committee; (2) demonstrated proficiency in research methods, ordinarily accomplished by successful completion of appropriate courses in research methods; (3) passing a preliminary examination that has both a written component (addressing general questions concerning the field, questions on research methods, and questions on the candidate's areas of special competency) and an oral component (an oral examination by the student's committee concerning the written examination); and (4) successfully completing and defending a dissertation. There are a number of specifications and other requirements not described here (e.g., a requirement that two successive semesters must be spent in residence), but those listed are the central requirements. A minimum of three years of graduate study beyond the M.A. is usually needed to complete all the requirements for the doctoral degree.

 

For information on the M.S. in Health Communication, click here.