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School of Public Health
The School of Public Health offers the Master of Public Health (M.P.H.) and Doctor of Public Health (Dr.P.H.) degrees.
Certain degrees within the School of Public Health are not offered by the individual departments but are administered on a schoolwide level: the Master of Public Health; the Doctor of Public Health; eight concurrent degree programs, the J.D./M.P.H. with the School of Law, the M.B.A./M.P.H. with the John E. Anderson Graduate School of Management, the M.S.W./M.P.H. with Social Welfare, the M.A./M.P.H. with African Studies, with Asian American Studies, and with Islamic Studies; the M.P.P./M.P.H and the M.U.R.P./M.P.H. with the Luskin School of Public Affairs; and two articulated degree programs, M.D./M.P.H. with the School of Medicine and the M.A./M.P.H. with Latin American Studies.
The M.P.H. is a professional degree in the field of public health. Students are expected to focus on public health practice and to acquire a broad knowledge related to professional skills.
For information on the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Biostatistics, Environmental Health Sciences, Epidemiology, Health Policy and Management, or the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Public Health within the Department of Community Health Sciences, applicants should see the listings for those departments. For information on the interdepartmental Ph.D. degree program housed in the Department of Environmental Health Sciences, applicants should see the listing for Molecular Toxicology.
For information on the M.S. program in Preventive Medicine, applicants should contact the Student Affairs Office in the School of Public Health.
Admission
Program Name
Public Health
Information regarding the Executive MPH and the MPH for Health Professionals appear separately.
Address
A1-269 CHS
Box 951772
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1772
Phone
(310) 825-5524
Leading to the degree of
M.P.H., M.S., Dr.P.H., Ph.D.
Admission Limited to
Consult department.
Deadline to apply
December 1st
Applications received after this date have reduced opportunities for admission and financial aid.
GRE (General and/or Subject)
GRE: General or equivalent
MCAT or DAT scores are accepted only for applicants already holding MD or DDS degrees or currently enrolled in medical or dental school. LSAT scores are accepted only for applicants to the joint JD/MPH program. Biostatistics does not accept MCAT, DAT, or LSAT scores.
Letters of Recommendation
3, two from former professors and one from an employer; if no employer, three from former professors
Other Requirements
In addition to the University’s minimum requirements and those listed above, all applicants are expected to submit the departmental application through the Schools of Public Health Application Service (SOPHAS] and a statement of purpose.
Prior field experience is not required as a condition of admission, although a background of public health experience may be considered. Also, applicants must be accepted by and accommodated in the department of the School of Public Health in which they wish to study. Applicants needing help in deciding on a department should speak either to the department administrators or to staff in the Student Affairs Office. Exceptionally qualified applicants may be considered on an individual basis.
Applicants must perform satisfactorily on the verbal and quantitative sections of a recent Graduate Record Examination (GRE), except as above. The Biostatistics Department has different criteria for evaluating performance on aptitude tests for its applicants. Those applying to the biostatistics program should contact that department. No screening examination is required for admission; however, specified courses are required by Biostatistics and by Environmental Health Sciences. Applicants whose undergraduate coursework has been deficient in breadth of fundamental training have to take specified undergraduate courses after admission. At the discretion of the Associate Dean for Academic Programs, the GRE requirement may be waived for applicants who hold a doctoral degree from a U.S. university and five years of relevant postdoctoral experience.
Master’s degrees: The prior program of study for applicants to the M.P.H. degree should include adequate preparation in mathematics, physical sciences, biological sciences, and social sciences, and typically includes two courses each in mathematics, biological sciences, social sciences; one course in physical sciences; and other courses that constitute an adequate preparation for the proposed area of specialization.
Applicants whose prior work in the biological, physical, mathematical, and social sciences does not constitute adequate preparation for the proposed area of specialization must include courses in those sciences in their graduate programs; these may not be applied toward the minimum requirements for the degree.
Interdivisional International Health. The school offers several options for foreign or domestic students interested in international health. Faculty in all departments of the school are actively involved in health-related programs in foreign settings, and many departments on campus have international, health-related interests and courses relevant to health occupations and cross-cultural settings.
Applicants who are interested must specify the department most relevant to their skills area on their application, clearly indicating their international interests. Once admitted, students are given an appropriate adviser and directed to the international health committee, which is interdepartmental and promotes internationally-oriented training and research. Its members consult with interested students and attempt to optimize the learning experience.
Biostatistics
Students concentrating in biostatistics should have completed at least one year of calculus. Students whose preparation does not include sufficient calculus must take courses in the Mathematics Department while in the M.P.H. Program. Majors in mathematics, statistics, computer science, or a field of application in biostatistics are preferred.
Environmental Health Sciences
Applicants concentrating in environmental health sciences should have a bachelor’s (or master’s) degree in public health, life sciences, physical sciences, or engineering or a related field. Students who have taken extensive related coursework but who majored in other fields, or who have a related professional degree, are also encouraged to apply. Well-prepared applicants have basic knowledge of biology, mathematics (through calculus), and chemistry (including at least one quarter of organic chemistry or biochemistry).
Health Policy and Management
Applicants interested in the joint M.P.H./M.B.A. program in the Health Policy and Management Department must take the GMAT. The GRE is not required for the concurrent program.
Applicants to the one-year health services organization program in the Health Policy and Management Department must have a prior doctoral degree (M.D., D.D.S., J.D., Ph.D., or equivalent). Applicants with doctoral degrees from other countries should plan to take the two-year program. Satisfactory performance on the GRE is required, and a personal interview is recommended.
African Studies, M.A./Public Health, M.P.H.
The School of Public Health and the African Studies Program have a concurrent degree program whereby students can pursue the M.A. degree in African Studies and the M.P.H. with a specialization in Community Health Sciences at the same time. Applicants are required to satisfy the admission requirements of both programs and students must meet the requirements in both programs to be awarded the degrees. Applicants interested in this concurrent program should contact the African Studies program, and the Student Affairs Office, School of Public Health.
Asian American Studies, M.A./Public Health, M.P.H.
The Asian American Studies Department and the Department of Community Health Sciences in the School of Public Health offer a concurrent degree program whereby students can work for the M.A. in Asian American Studies and the M.P.H. Students must complete the program requirements for both degrees. When applying, the same statement of purpose may be submitted to each program. Applicants interested in this concurrent program should contact the Asian American Studies Department and the Student Affairs Office, School of Public Health.
Islamic Studies, M.A./Public Health, M.P.H.
The School of Public Health and the Islamic Studies Program have a concurrent degree program whereby students can work for the M.A. in Islamic Studies and the M.P.H. The concurrent program expects to attract both students specializing in public health who plan to live and work in the Middle East, North Africa, or Southeast Asia, and require knowledge of the Islamic culture, society and language, and students in Islamic Studies desiring to prepare for a professional or academic career in public health. Applicants interested in this concurrent program should contact the Islamic Studies Program and the Student Affairs Office, School of Public Health.
Latin American Studies, M.A./Public Health, M.P.H.
The School of Public Health and the Latin American Studies Program have arranged an articulated degree program, organized to permit specializations within the M.A. and the M.P.H. degrees, with the award of both degrees after approximately three years of graduate study. Qualified students apply to the graduate adviser of the Latin American Studies Program and to a relevant area of public health, such as: (1) environmental and nutritional sciences; (2) epidemiology; (3) health education; or (4) population and family health.
Potential applicants should contact the Graduate Adviser in Latin American Studies and/or the Public Health/Latin American Studies Articulated Degree Program Adviser, School of Public Health.
Law, J.D./Public Health, M.P.H.
The School of Public Health and the School of Law offer a four year concurrent degree program in which students complete both the M.P.H. and the J.D. degree programs simultaneously. The program comprises three years in the School of Law and one year in the School of Public Health. In addition, the M.P.H. degree requires field-training experience, which is generally completed in the summer following the public health study. Applicants apply separately to the School of Law and the School of Public Health. Students enrolled in the first year of either the J.D. or the M.P.H. program may also apply for admission to the concurrent program. Interested applicants should contact the School of Law and the Student Affairs Office in the School of Public Health.
Medicine, M.D./Public Health, M.P.H.
The School of Public Health and the David Geffen School of Medicine have an articulated degree program designed to enable students to complete both the M.P.H. and the M.D. degree programs in five years. The program includes four years of medical school and one year plus one additional quarter in the School of Public Health. Additionally, up to ten weeks of field training is required for the M.P.H. The field training is generally completed in the summer after the year of public health coursework. UCLA medical students apply for admission to the School of Public Health in the fall quarter of their third year.
Public Policy, M.P.P./Public Health, M.P.H.
The Department of Public Policy and the Department of Health Services offer a concurrent degree program whereby students may pursue the Master of Public Policy degree and a Master of Public Health degree at the same time. For admission, applicants are required to satisfy the regular admission requirements for both the M.P.P. and the M.P.H. programs. During the first year, students generally begin with the first year core courses in Public Policy. In Spring Quarter students also begin taking the required Health Services courses. For the remaining two years of the concurrent degree program, students take both Public Policy and Health Services courses for a total of 68 units in Public Policy and 56 units in Health Services. Applicants interested in the concurrent program should contact the graduate adviser in Public Policy.
Social Welfare, M.S.W./Public Health, M.P.H.
The Department of Social Welfare and the Department of Community Health Sciences (Public Health) offer a concurrent program whereby students pursue the Master of Social Welfare and the Master of Public Health at the same time. Applicants are required to satisfy the regular admission requirements of each program. Studentsin the three-year concurrent program complete their first year curriculum in either Social Welfare or Public Health. During the second year, students complete the first-year core courses in the other department along with certain electives. In the third year, students complete the advanced practice methods and field internship course sequences in Social Welfare, complete requirements and electives in Public Health, and meet remaining requirements for both programs. Students must meet requirements for graduation in both programs to be awarded either degree. Applicants interested in the program should contact the department of Social Welfare or the department of Community Health Sciences.
Urban Planning, MURP./Public Health, M.P.H.
The Environmental Health Sciences department in the School of Public Health and the department of Urban Planning in the School of Public Affairs offer a concurrent plan of study providing an integrated curriculum for students interested in interdisciplinary training on the public health consequences of urban planning. Students in this program study how public health intersects with urban design and land use patterns, location choices and acticity participation, economic factors, equity and social justice, governance and institutional management and planning for sustainability.
Concurrent students pursue studies in both schools/departments and following three years of full time study earn both the Master of Public Health with an emphasis in Environmental Health Sciences and the Master of Urban and Regional Planning.
Applicants must apply and be admitted to both the M.P.H and MURP programs. Further details regarding coursework and program structure may be obtained from the admissions office or graduate adviser in either the department of Urban Planning or the department of Environmental Health Sciences.
Advising
An adviser is appointed for each new master’s student by the head of the respective department. Student and adviser together agree upon a study list for each academic quarter and both the adviser and the Associate Dean for Academic Programs must approve any subsequent alterations. Students are expected to meet with their advisers each quarter. A departmental guidance committee is established when the student has completed approximately half of the program for the master’s degree. The department chair nominates the departmental guidance committee after consultation with the student and the student’s adviser.
An adviser is responsible for the student’s academic progress. Progress is evaluated on an ongoing basis. At the end of each quarter, the Associate Dean for Academic Programs reviews academic listings of students and notifies them and the advisers when the cumulative grade-point average is below 3.0. Advisers review each case with their advisees and make recommendations to the Associate Dean for Academic Programs for continuance or dismissal. Students who wish to change advisers must file a petition which must be approved by the new adviser, the department chair, and the Associate Dean for Academic Programs.
Areas of Study
Areas of specialization and typical course plans, in addition to mandatory courses, are listed below.
Biostatistics
Required department courses include Biostatistics 110A, 110B, (100A and 100B may be substituted with departmental permission); Biostatistics 201A, 201B, 402A, 402B (402B satisfies the field training requirement), 403A and 406; and 12 units of elective courses from Biostatistics 200B, 200C, M210 through M238, or M403B, 410 through 419. Additional elective courses are recommended and should be selected in public health, biomathematics, or mathematics.
J.D./M.P.H. The J.D./M.P.H. program with a specialization in Biostatistics requires a minimum of 58 quarter units in the School of Public Health. Required department courses include Biostatistics 110A, 110B (100A and 100B may be substituted with departmental permission); Biostatistics 200A, 201A, 201B, 402A, 402B (402B satisfies the field training requirement), 403A and 406; and 12 units of elective courses from Biostatistics 200B, 200C, M210 through M238, or M403B, 410 through 419. A maximum of eight elective quarter units from Law courses are allowed for concurrent credit toward the M.P.H. degree.
Community Health Sciences
A minimum of 60 units of graduate and upper division coursework is required for the M.P.H. degree. Normally two years or six quarters are needed to complete the 60 units of coursework required. No less than 32 units must be taken in the department. A maximum of 12 elective units from outside the department may count towards the 60 units. Candidates with a prior doctoral degree or advanced preparation in a related field may petition the departmental faculty to waive up to 12 units for the M.P.H. degree.
All students are required to complete Community Health Sciences 210, 211A-211B, and four units of 400 (400 hours of field work).
Students are required to select one course from each of the three curricular areas of a) Public Health Practice, b) Populations, and c) Individual and Structural Influences (12 units). The courses for these three areas are listed below. New CHS department courses will be added to these areas as appropriate. Students are required to take at least one additional course (4 units) within CHS. An additional course in research methods or program planning, similar to CHS 211 A&B is strongly recommended for students in the second year of the program.
| Public Health Practice | Populations | Individual and Structural Influences |
|---|---|---|
| 212: Advanced Social Research Methods in Health | 200: Global Health Problems | 220: Racism and Public Health: Social Epidemiologic Approaches |
| 213: Research in Community and Patient Health Education | 205: Immigrant Health | 224: Social Determinants of Nutrition and Health |
| M216: Qualitative Research Methodology | 226: Women’s Health and Well-Being | 235: Influence of Social and Physical Environment on Racial Health Disparities |
| M218: Questionnaire Design and Administration | 231: Maternal and Child Nutrition | 247: Population Change and Public Policy |
| 257: Program Planning in Community Disaster Preparedness | M239: Race and Ethnicity as a Concept in Practice and Research | 254: Intentional Disasters: War and Refugees |
| 258: Cooperative Interagency Management in Disasters | 240: Child and Reproductive Health in Communities: Global Environmental Perspective | M263: Social Demography of Los Angeles |
| 271: Health-Related Behavior Change | 246: Women’s Roles and Family Health | M272: Social Epidemiology |
| 276: Complementary and Alternative Medicine | 248: Women’s Mental Health | 273: Social Epidemiology of Chronic Disease |
| 282: Communication in Health Promotion and Education | M260: Health and Culture in Americas | 284: Sociocultural Aspects of Mental Health |
| 285: Evidence-Based Health Promotion Programs for Older Adults | M264: Latin America: Traditional Medicine, Shamanism, and Folk Illness | 291: Health Policy and Aged |
| 288:Health Communication in Popular Media | 290: Race, Class, Culture, and Aging | 440: Public Health and National Security at U.S.-Mexico Border |
| 292: Communication and Media Development in Health Promotion/Education | M294: Social and Behavioral Factors of HIV/AIDS: Global Perspective | 448: Nutrition Policies and Programs: Domestic and International Perspectives |
| 295: Overview of Emergency Public Health | 431: Foundations of Reproductive Health | CM470: Improving Worker Health: Social Movements, Policy Debates, and Public Health |
| 443: Assessment of Family Nutrition | 432: Perinatal Healthcare: Principles, Programs, and Policies | |
| 451: Post-Disaster Community Health | 434A: Maternal and Child Health in Developing Areas | |
| 474: Self-Care and Self-Help in Community Health | 447: Health and Social Context in Middle East | |
| 484: Risk Communications | 477: Health Disparities, Health Equity, and Sexual Minority Populations | |
| 485: Resource Development for Community Health Programs |
Students have the option to focus their studies in areas such as social and behavioral sciences, health education/promotion, international health, child and family health, public health nutrition, health policy, disaster planning and relief, aging and life course, women’s health, and population health.
Students focusing in health education/promotion may select coursework to meet the requirements for the Society for Public Health Education, and students with appropriate prerequisites may select coursework to meet the requirements set by the Association of Graduate Faculties in Public Health Nutrition.
Students who complete the UCLA undergraduate minor in Public Health have already completed the four 100-level core courses (Biostatistics 100A, Environmental Health Sciences 100, Epidemiology 100, and Health Policy and Management 100). Accordingly these students should not retake these courses but replace them with four additional elective courses in order to complete the 60 units required for the master’s degree. Students must consult with their adviser when selecting these replacement courses. For any courses taken outside of the School, students must file a blue petition and have it approved prior to registration. If the blue petition is not approved, the student must consult with their adviser about selecting other options. Replacement courses within the School do not require a blue petition.
J.D./M.P.H. The J.D./M.P.H. program with a specialization in Community Health Sciences requires a minimum of 60 quarter units in the School of Public Health. Required department courses include Community Health Sciences 210, 211A and 211B, four units of 400 (400 hours of field work), and eight units (two courses) from the following (no substitutions are allowed): Community Health Sciences 200, 231, 247, 271, 282, 284, M287, 295, 432. A maximum of eight elective quarter units from Law courses are allowed for concurrent credit toward the M.P.H. degree.
African Studies, M.A. /M.P.H. The M.A. African Studies./M.P.H. program with a specialization in Community Health Sciences allows students to use a maximum of eight units of coursework in Public Health toward both the M.A. degree in African Studies and the M.P.H. degree.
M.S.W./M.P.H. The M.S.W./M.P.H. program with a specialization in Community Health Sciences requires a minimum of 67 units of Social Welfare coursework and 52 units of Public Health coursework. The remaining nine units of the regular 76-unit requirement for the M.S.W. degree are fulfilled through research and policy courses taken for the M.P.H. degree and are applied toward the M.S.W. program through a pro forma petition to the Graduate Division upon application for advancement to candidacy. A maximum of eight quarter units of Social Welfare coursework may be applied toward the M.P.H. degree.
Environmental Health Sciences
Required department courses include Biostatistics 100B; Environmental Health Sciences C200A, C200B, 201, C240, 400, 401 (or 410A and 410B), and 411 (to be taken once a year for two years). At least 12 units of elective courses are required and are selected by students in consultation with the faculty adviser. Any departmental required course may be waived by instructor consent if the student either has taken a similar course or can pass a waiver examination. Any students who matriculate into the program without prior completion of the equivalent of one year of chemistry and one year of biology must address these deficiencies prior to graduation.
Students may choose to focus on Industrial Hygiene. The M.P.H. program in Industrial Hygiene is fully accredited by the Related Accreditation Commission of the Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology (ABET/ASAC). In addition, students in the M.P.H. program in Environmental Health Sciences may choose to pursue a curriculum that has been approved by the California Registered Environmental Health Specialist program.
J.D./M.P.H. The J.D./M.P.H. program with a specialization in Environmental Health Sciences requires a minimum of 58 quarter units in the School of Public Health. Required courses include Biostatistics 100B; Environmental Health Sciences C200A, C200B, 201, C240, 400, 401 (or 410A and 410B), and M411 (to be taken once a year for two years). At least 12 units of elective courses are required for area of specialization. A maximum of eight elective quarter units from Law courses are allowed for concurrent credit toward the M.P.H. degree.
Urban Planning, M.U.R.P./Public Health, M.P.H. The concurrent degree program requires completion of 110 units (as opposed to 128 units if the two degree programs were completed sequentially). Students are required to complete 86 units of required courses, 20 units of Urban Planning stream electives (chosen from an approved list) and 4 units of Environmental Health Sciences/Public Health Electives. Concurrent degree program students are required to separately satisfy the capstone requirements for each program (i.e. the comprehensive examination option in Public Health). A total of 18 units of course overlap is allowed between the two programs.
Required courses include Biostatistics 100A or Urban Planning 220A, Biostatistics 100B or Urban Planning 220B, Community Health Sciences 100, Health Policy and Management 100, Epidemiology 100, Environmental Health Sciences C200A, C200B, 201, 207 (or Urban Planning M206A), 208, C240, 401, 411 (once a year for two years), 400 (or Urban Planning 496), Urban Planning 205A, 205B, 207, 222A, M254, 269, 281.
Epidemiology
Students with no prior clinical doctorate degree are required to complete Biostatistics 100B, Epidemiology 200A-200B-200C, 220, 400, two units of a data management course in Biostatistics that features SAS, and 20 elective units taken from the general list of courses: Epidemiology 203, M204, M211, M212, M218, 220, 222, 223, 224, M225, M226, 227, 228, 229, 230, 231, 232, 240, 242, 243, 244, 246, 247, 248, 249, 251, M252, 253, M254, M255, 257, M258, 259, 260, 261, 262, 263, 265, 266, 267, 268, 270, 271, M272, 273, 280, 402, M403, M406, 410, 411, 412, 413, 414, 415, 417, M418, and 420. Among the 20 units of electives, up to eight can be taken outside the Epidemiology department with the consent of the advisor and by petition.
Students with a prior clinical doctorate degree or students enrolled in an M.D./M.P.H. program are required to complete Biostatistics 100B, Epidemiology 200A-200B-200C, 400 and 14 total elective units. Students may apply six units in relevant topics from the Department of Medicine or other departments in the School of Public Health toward their total 14-unit elective requirement.
All students must submit a report demonstrating competence in epidemiologic methodology. The report may not be submitted prior to the completion of Epidemiology 400. Epidemiology 400 must be taken after completion of 200C.
J.D./M.P.H. The J.D./M.P.H. program with a specialization in Epidemiology requires minimum of 68 quarter units in the School of Public Health. Required courses include Biostatistics 100B, Epidemiology 200A-200B-200C, 220, 400, four units of a data management courses in Biostatistics that features SAS, and 20 elective units taken from the general list of electives. Consult the department Student Affairs Officer for acceptable electives. A maximum of eight elective quarter units from Law courses are allowed for concurrent credit toward the M.P.H. degree.
Health Policy and Management
Health Policy and Management specialization programs include (1) Health Care Management, (2) Health Policy, (3) Executive (4) Health Services Organization, (5) a concurrent M.P.H./M.B.A., (6) a concurrent M.P.H./M.P.P., (7) J.D./M.P.H., and (8) M.D./M.P.H. All specialization programs require Health Policy and Management 200A-200B, 400, and a summer internship in a local health care organization, as well as School of Public Health core courses: Biostatistics 100A, Community Health Sciences 100, Environmental Health Sciences 100, and Epidemiology 100.
Students who hold an M.B.A. and three years of managerial experience in health care will be required to take 15 courses rather than 18. In addition, students who have had the equivalent course work in their M.B.A. program may petition to waive out of an additional 3 courses. Petitions will be considered on a case by case basis.
Health Care Management. The Health Care Management specialization is a two-year program requiring 23 full courses (88 units) and a major written research report based on the summer internship at a local health care organization. Required courses include Health Policy and Management 232, 234, M236, M285, 215A, 400, 403, M422, 431, 433, 436, 437, 440A, and 445. In addition, students select at least three elective courses from Health Policy and Management or other academic schools/departments approved via blue petition.
Health Policy. The Health Policy specialization is a two-year program requiring 22 full courses (88 units), and a major written research report based on the summer internship in a local health care organization. Required courses include Health Policy and Management 232, M233, M236, M285, 215A, 286, M287, 400, M422, 431, and Biostatistics 100B. In addition, students select at least five elective courses from Health Policy and Management or other academic schools/departments approved via blue petition.
Executive. The executive program is for people with at least three years of managerial experience in the health care field. It is a two-year program requiring 18 full courses and a major written research report based on the summer internship. Required courses include Health Policy and Management 234, M236, 251, M422, 431, 433, 436, 450, and Biostatistics 419.
Health Services Organization. The health services organization specialization is a one-year program requiring a minimum of 13 full courses (56 units). Admission is limited to students with prior doctoral-level degrees completed in the U.S. (M.D., Ph.D., J.D., D.D.S., or equivalent). Required courses include Health Policy and Management M236, 400 and 403. In addition, students select at least four elective courses from the Department of Health Policy and Management or other academic schools/departments approved via blue petition.
Concurrent M.P.H./M.B.A. The concurrent M.P.H./M.B.A. program is a three-year concurrent degree program. It requires a minimum of 14 full courses (52 units) in the School of Public Health and a summer internship in a local health care organization. Required courses include Health Policy and Management 232,M236, M285, 215A, 400, M422 and 437. In addition, students select at least one two unit elective course from the Department of Health Policy and Management. Management 402 may substituted for Biostatistics 100A. Students are waived out of the Health Policy and Management 400 requirement if they have successfully completed an equivalent class in the M.B.A. program. However, no unit credit is awarded for waived courses. Students must take an elective course to fulfill unit requirements.
Concurrent M.P.H./M.P.P. The concurrent M.P.H./M.P.P. program is a three-year concurrent program. During the first year students generally begin with the first year core courses in Public Policy. In Spring Quarter students also begin taking the required Health Policy and Management courses. For the remaining two years of the concurrent degree program, students take both Public Policy and Health Policy and Management courses for a total of 68 units in Public Policy and 56 units in Health Policy and Management. A total of 12 units of course overlap is allowed between the two programs. Required courses in Health Policy and Management include Health Policy and Management M287, M422, and 400. In addition, students select four elective courses from Health Policy and Management or other academic schools/departments approved via blue petition.
Concurrent M.P.H./M.U.R.P. The concurrent M.P.H./M.U.R.P. program requires completion of 110 units (as opposed to 128 units if the two degree programs were completed sequentially). Students are required to complete 86 units of required courses, 20 units of Urban Planning Stream electives and four units of Environmental Health Sciences/Public Health electives. Concurrent degree program students are required to separately satisfy the capstone requirements for each program (i.e., the comprehensive examination in Public Health and the comprehensive examination or master’s thesis in Urban and Regional Planning. A total of 18 units of course overlap is allowed between the two programs. Required courses include Biostatistics 100A or Urban Planning 220A, Biostatistics 100B or Urban Planning 220B, Community Health Sciences 100, Health Policy and Management 100, Epidemiology 100, Environmental Health Sciences C200A, C200B, 201, 207 (or Urban Planning M206A), 208, C240, 400 (or Urban Planning 496), 401, M411 (once a year for two years), Urban Planning 205A, 205B, 207, 222A, M254, 269, 281.
J.D./M.P.H. The J.D./M.P.H. program with a specialization in Health Policy and Management requires a minimum of 14 full courses (56 units) in the School of Public Health and a field training experience in a state or federal agency, as counsel to a hospital or other health care institution, or working in a law firm with a substantial health law practice. Required courses include Health Policy and Management M236, M285, 286, M287, 400, 403, M422, and 437. A total of 18 units of elective courses are required. A maximum of the 16 elective quarter units from Law courses are allowed for concurrent credit toward the M.P.H. degree. Three Law electives chosen from an approved list, plus one additional Law course chosen with the approval of the Public Health adviser constitute the 16 units.
M.D./M.P.H. The M.D./M.P.H. program with a specialization in Health Policy and Management requires a minimum of 14 full courses (60 units) in the School of Public Health and a major research report based on the summer internship in a local health care organization. Required courses include Health Policy and Management M236, 400, 403, and M422. In addition, students select at least three elective courses from Health Policy and Management or other academic schools/departments approved via blue petition.
Foreign Language Requirement
None.
Course Requirements
Students must complete at least one year of graduate residence at the University of California and a minimum of 11 full courses (44 units), at least six of which must be graduate courses and at least two of which must be 400-series courses. Only one 596 course (four units) may be applied toward the six graduate courses; 597 and 598 courses may not be applied toward the degree.
Required school core courses include Biostatistics 100A or 110A; Community Health Sciences 100 (210, 211A, 211B for community health sciences majors); Environmental Health Sciences 100 (C200A-C200B for environmental health sciences majors); Epidemiology 100 (200A-200B-200C for epidemiology majors) and Health Services 100 (200A-200B for health services majors). Each core course may be waived via blue petition if the student has taken a similar college-level course ,and passes the waiver examination. Students may substitute the core sequence for majors in departments outside their own major department for the department’s100-level course (e.g. a Community Health Sciences major who takes Biostatistics 201A, 201B). Students must file a blue petition for the substitution.
In addition to the core courses, at least three courses (two or four units) outside the student’s area of specialization are strongly recommended.
Only courses in which a grade of B- or better is received may be applied toward the requirements for a master’s degree. Courses taken for S/U grading may not be applied toward the degree requirements. Students must maintain an average of no less than 3.0 (B) in all courses required or elected during graduate residence at the University of California.
African Studies, M.A./Public Health, M.P.H.
A maximum of eight units of coursework in Public Health may be applied toward both the M.A. degree in African Studies and the M.P.H. degree.
Asian American Studies, M.A./Public Health, M.P.H.
A maximum of 12 units of course work in Public Health may be applied toward both the M.A. degree in Asian American Studies and the M.P.H. degree.
Islamic Studies, M.A./Public Health, M.P.H.
A maximum of 12 units of course work in Public Health may be applied toward both the M.A . degree in Islamic Studies and the M.P.H. degree.
Teaching Experience
Not required.
Field Experience
Field training in an approved public health program is required of candidates who have not had prior relevant field experience. A minimum of four units, but no more than eight units, is required. Students must be in good academic standing, with a grade point average of 3.0 or better, before beginning the field experience.
Comprehensive Examination Plan
Students must pass a comprehensive examination in their department. Students may be reexamined once. The aim of the examination, as a culminating experience, is to assess the student’s ability to select theories, methods, and techniques from across the content matter of a field, integrate and synthesize knowledge, and apply it to the solution of public health problems. Students must be in good academic standing, with a grade point average of 3.0 or better, before taking the comprehensive examination.
Thesis Plan
None.
Time-to-Degree
From graduate admission to award of the degree, normal progress is from three to seven quarters. Upper time limit for completion of all requirements is seven quarters of enrollment, including quarters enrolled in previous graduate study at a UC campus prior to admission to the School of Public Health. Maximum time allowable from enrollment to graduation, including leaves of absence, is five years.
Advising
An academic adviser is assigned to each new student by the chair of the respective department. Student and adviser together agree upon a study list for each academic quarter; any subsequent alterations must be approved both by the student’s adviser. Students may change advisers after the first quarter as long as the student and the new adviser agree. This is done by filing a petition countersigned by the area head/department chair and the Associate Dean of Student Affairs.
Within the first three quarters of study, students file Doctoral Form 1, Petition for Establishment of Three-Member Guidance Committee and Study in Major and Minor Fields for the Dr.P.H. The guidance committee comprises three members including the student’s adviser in the major field and the student’s adviser in the minor field. On this form students list the courses to be taken for the minor which must be approved by the student’s adviser and the department chair.
Community Health Sciences
An academic adviser is assigned to each new student by the head of the department. Student and adviser together agree upon a study list for each academic quarter. The adviser supervises the student’s completion of course work and preparation for the written qualifying examinations, and can, but need not, serve as the Chair of the Guidance Committee appointed at the end of the first year of study.
After being enrolled for three quarters, students file Doctoral Form 1, which designates the membership of the guidance committee. The guidance committee consists of the student’s adviser in the major field, a second faculty member in Community Health Sciences and the student’s adviser in the minor (cognate) field. Courses to be taken for the cognate field are listed on this form. The members of the Guidance committee must be full-time faculty with appointments in the professorial series (tenure-eligible, in-residence, or acting or emeritus, with the proviso that one of the four faculty on the committee and/or the committee co-chair may hold an appointment in the Clinical or Adjunct professorial series. The Guidance Committee membership must be approved by the Department Chair. This committee functions as a group to assist in tailoring the program to the student’s needs and objectives. The student is responsible for informing the committee about the student’s progress, and should also turn to the committee first in the event that special assistance or intervention is required. Hence, the committee should be selected in recognition of its role in promoting the student’s academic progress.
Major fields or Subdisciplines
Major fields and subdisciplines and typical course plans are listed below.
Biostatistics
Consult the graduate adviser.
Community Health Sciences
Consult the graduate adviser.
Environmental Health Sciences
Consult the graduate adviser.
Epidemiology
Consult the graduate adviser.
Health Policy and Management
The Doctor of Public Health (Dr.P.H.) is a schoolwide degree and the highest professional degree for leaders in public health, including health care, governmental public health practice, territorial non-profit, and other health-related organizations at the local, state, and national levels. Students who complete the program become well grounded in the study of health services organization, deliver and management. They also develop a mastery of population health, social and policy analysis, evidence-based health promotion, and program evaluation. The dissertation is applied and practical in nature and addresses a problem within an organizational context. Health services is one of the areas of specialization. There is no foreign language requirement. Program graduates advance to responsible leadership positions in a wide range of health-focused organizations in both the public and private secotrs.
Prerequisites are an M.P.H. degree or equivalent and at least two years of work experience in the field of health care of public health or health services delivery. Typical students will have worked in a government or private sector health agency and desire to advance their careers toward higher levels of leadership. Identifying a faculty adviser is another prerequisite for admission. Following matriculation, the adviser meets regularly with the student to develop a course curriculum and practicum tailored to the experience and career goals of the student. This individualized curriculum and the availability of coursework in other graduate programs within the university are strengths of this doctoral program.
The Dr.P.H. program can be completed in three years of full-time study, including two years of academic study and one year of field work experience (practicum or residency). In the first two years of study, formal coursework is intended to acquaint the student with the full scope of public health knowledge. The student is expected to complete 14-21 full courses beyond the M.P.H. degree in Health Policy and Management to develop mastery in the following areas (core competencies): (1) Population Health Perspective: Ability to identify and utilize the tools for developing and implementing population health and health care interventions, and perform evaluations of these interventions; (2) Assessment and Evaluation: Ability to amass and critically evaluate evidence for health effectiveness and dollar cost effectiveness of population-targeted policy and programmatic interventions to improve or maintain health; (3) Leadership: Ability to apply established leadership concepts and principles to structure and lead organizations or groups in health care, public health, or health-interested agencies; (4) Determinants of Health: Ability to articulate the complex relationships between underlying determinants and health for the U.S. population and key sociodemographically-defined (age, ethnicity, gender, SES) population subgroups; (5) Public Health Infrastructure: Ability to describe key aspects of the development/evolution of the ways that society organizes to protect and advance health, demonstrating an understanding of the historical underpinnings of current issues in public health policy; (6) Inter-Sectoral Relationships: Ability to understand, foster, and manage the relationships between the private and public health care sectors in the U.S.; (7) Systems Management: Ability to use effective management principles and practices to develop health improvement strategies in various sectors and settings; and (8) Organizational Management: Ability to apply advanced management precepts and tools, including performance and change, required for the efficient operation of a health services organization.
Coursework includes a public health leadership seminar featuring participating public health practitioners as well as scholars/academicians. The specific course program depends on the student’s previous coursework, experience, and leadership interests. Because fostering discovery is important in preparing students for leadership positions, and flexibility is an appealing feature of this doctoral program, students may fulfill program requirements with appropriate coursework from other graduate programs within the university (Education, Law, Management, Nursing, Public Policy, and Sociology).
Foreign Language Requirement
None.
Course Requirements
Course requirements in the major field depend on the department/program and the field chosen. Students must take a minimum of six full courses (four must be at the 200 or 400 level) in at least two School of Public Health departments outside the major department.
The major department requires an additional area of concentration which may be either inside or outside the school. In departments allowing it, an equivalent field experience completed while a doctoral student and approved by the guidance committee may be substituted for the additional area of concentration.
Biostatistics
A written screening examination of all students entering the doctoral program is required and must be successfully completed before the end of the first year in the program, if not taken prior to entering. Courses covered by this and other examinations are determined in consultation with an adviser and the department faculty. Students must complete the following courses, unless previously taken: Biostatistics 200A-200B-200C, 202A, 202B, M215, 250A-250B; any three additional graduate-level courses in biostatistics selected with consent of the adviser; three courses in the 400 series selected with consent of the adviser. All registered doctoral students must enroll in Biostatistics 409 (doctoral statistical consulting, field training course) for three consecutive quarters and in Biostatistics 245 every quarter.
In addition, required for breadth are 24 units of courses at the 200 or 400 levels selected with consent of the adviser in at least two School of Public Health departments/programs other than Biostatistics. The School also requires students to select an additional area of concentration. Biostatistics students fulfill this requirement by enrolling in Biostatistics 409 for three consecutive quarters. This requirement must be met prior to advancement to candidacy.
Electives, selected in consultation with the adviser, should be chosen from courses in mathematics, biomathematics, human genetics, AIDS, survey research methods, operations research, computer data processing, and other appropriate areas.
Community Health Sciences
If the student does not have a master’s degree in public health, the school’s core courses for the M.P.H. degree are required: Biostatistics 100A, Epidemiology 100, Health Policy and Management 100, and Environmental Health Sciences 100; and the department’s core courses, Community Health Sciences 210, 211A-211B. Additionally, all students are required to take the following courses if they have not already taken them or their equivalents during the course of their master’s studies: Community Health Sciences 212, Biostatistics 100A, 100B, and 406. These courses do not count toward the minimum course requirements for the doctoral degree.
In addition to the coursework specified above, the student must take a minimum of 48 units in residence in the doctoral program. Twenty of the 48 units required must be taken within the Department of Community Health Sciences. Only four units of individual studies (Community Health Sciences 596) may be counted toward the 48-unit minimum requirement. Students must take a minimum of two courses (eight units) in research methodology (i.e., data acquisition) and two courses (eight units) in statistics (i.e., data analysis). These courses may be taken inside or outside of the School of Public Health. All doctoral students must enroll in Community Health Sciences 286 (doctoral roundtable) every quarter until they are advanced to candidacy. With the exception of the first quarter of registration as a doctoral student, students may petition to waive out of the seminar for up to two quarters. The doctoral roundtable does not fulfill any of the 48 units required for the doctorate.
Students must complete a minor which is expected to be in another department within the School of Public Health. Six graduate-level courses (24 units) are required, four units of which must be taken from within one department. Students must consult with their advisers before declaring a minor.
Environmental Health Sciences
Students select a course of study upon consultation with their Advisor and guidance committee. A total of six full courses (four must be at the 200 or 400 level) in at least two Fielding School of Public Health departments other than Environmental Health Sciences are required for breadth. Students must complete the following required courses: Environmental Health Sciences C200A & C200B, 296, 411 (taken one quarter per year for the first two years), and Environment 410A. In addition, students must complete Epidemiology 200A, 200B, and 200C; these courses may count towards the six courses required outside the department.
Epidemiology
Students must complete a minimum of 50 units beyond the requirements of the M.P.H. degree in Epidemiology. Epidemiology M204 (four units) and either four units for a course in statistics beyond Biostatistics 100B/110B or four units in methodology from a list approved by the department are required. The requirements are equivalent for all students, regardless of whether they hold a prior doctoral degree. Students must take at least five full courses (20 units) of the 50 units within the Department of Epidemiology, and a minimum of six full courses (24 units) in at least two School of Public Health departments other than Epidemiology. At least four of the six non-Epidemiology courses must be at the 200 or 400 level. Students must also take three quarters of Epidemiology 292 for a total of six units, thereby fulfilling the 50-unit minimum requirement.
A field experience is required, chosen in consultation with the adviser, for a duration of at least eight months, and is composed of full-time field training at no more than two sites, with at least one being outside of the School of Public Health. During the field experience, students enroll in eight units of Epidemiology 596 in each quarter of the academic year. These 596 units are in addition to the 50-unit minimum requirement. It is recommended that the field work take place after the student has passed the written qualifying examination. The chosen field site may be with a government or non-government health agency, a private foundation, the military, or with a business in the private sector. The selected site should have public health relevance and offer exposure to creative epidemiologic practices and experiences. The intent is to provide experience in recognizing and describing health problems, determining causative factors, developing intervention or prevention strategies, and evaluating the effect or impact of health programs or policies.
Health Policy and Management
The core curriculum of 14 required courses includes Health Policy and Management 200A, 200B, 206 or M274, 207, 231, 232, 237A-237B, M249L, M287, 438, M442; one four-unit life course requirement from the following: Community Health Sciences 238, 285, Health Policy and Management M241, M242, M449A; and one four-unit management course to be selected from the following: Health Policy and Management 234, 251A, 431, 433, 437, 440A and 445.
Teaching Experience
Teaching experience is recommended but not required for the doctoral degree.
Written and Oral Qualifying Examinations
Academic Senate regulations require all doctoral students to complete and pass University written and oral qualifying examinations prior to doctoral advancement to candidacy. Also, under Senate regulations the University oral qualifying examination is open only to the student and appointed members of the doctoral committee. In addition to University requirements, some graduate programs have other pre-candidacy examination requirements. What follows in this section is how students are required to fulfill all of these requirements for this doctoral program.
Before advancement to candidacy, students must pass written examinations in the major prepared and administered by the guidance committee or by the faculty of the department. Normally no more than one reexamination after failure is allowed. The doctoral committee is nominated after the student has made a tentative decision on a dissertation topic. The doctoral committee consists of at least four faculty members who hold professorial appointments. Two of the faculty must be tenured. For students specializing in Epidemiology, the chair of the committee and one additional member must be from Epidemiology. Three of the four must hold appointments in Public Health; one must be an outside member who holds no appointment in Public Health; one of the four must be from the minor field. The doctoral committee administers the University Oral Qualifying Examination after the written examinations have been successfully completed.
Community Health Sciences
Before advancement to candidacy, all coursework must have been completed, and the student must have passed two written examinations and an oral qualifying examination in the major field. The first written examination is taken by all students. The other is tailored to the specific interests of the individual student. Both written examinations may be repeated only once. In addition, the student must complete the requirements for the minor field.
The first examination provides an assessment of the student’s breadth of substantive knowledge, theory, and methods that are common to the disciplines that comprise Community Health Sciences. Students are expected to demonstrate a coherent and well-synthesized command of this material. This examination is administered by the departmental doctoral committee in the Fall Quarter of each year. The second examination is in one of the areas of specialization: public health policy, health education/promotion, sociocultural aspects of health, public health nutrition, and international family health. Students are expected to demonstrate in-depth knowledge in the area, and to be able to apply this knowledge and knowledge derived from the minor to problems or practice and policy. The examination is based on a reading list generated by the student in consultation with the student’s guidance committee, which also administers the examination. It is administered after the first examination at a time that has been agreed upon mutually by the students and the guidance committee.
After the student has passed the written qualifying examinations and completed the minor requirements, and at least one month prior to taking the University Oral Qualifying Examination, a doctoral committee is nominated. The student first selects the committee chair, who also serves as the student’s adviser. The student and chair then work together to nominate the remaining committee members. The doctoral committee consists of at least four faculty members including the chair, who hold professorial appointments at UCLA. Two of the faculty must be tenured. Two of the four must hold appointments in Community Health Sciences; one must be an outside member who holds no appointment in the school of Public Health; one of the four must be from the minor field. Eligible faculty include those in the tenure-eligible series, the in-residence series, acting or emeritus in these series; in addition, one of the four committee members, who may also cochair if appropriate, may hold an appointment in the adjunct or clinical professorial series. The composition of the committee must be approved by the department chair. The doctoral committee guides the student’s progress toward completion of the dissertation.
The student is advanced to candidacy and commences work on a dissertation by passing the University Oral Qualifying Examination, which is administered by the doctoral committee. Only the student and the committee members attend this examination; all committee members must be present. The examination may be repeated once if a majority of the committee so recommends.
Health Policy and Management
Students are required to pass a written qualifying examination after completion of most of the required coursework, normally at the beginning of the third year of study. A doctoral committee is nominated after the student makes a tentative decision on a dissertation topic. The committee consists of at least four faculty members who hold regular appointments: two of the faculty must be tenured, two of the four must hold appointments in the department, and one must be an outside member who holds no appointment in the School of Public Health. The doctoral committee administers the University Oral Qualifying Examination (the dissertation proposal hearing), normally during the first six months of the practicum.
Required coursework must be completed prior to the commencement of the practicum. The practicum accommodates the completion of a problem-solving study for the specific organization. A preceptor is identified within the organization who assists the student in structuring the practicum and delineating expectations and opportunities. Usually, but not necessarily, this practicum is accomplished within the context of the student’s primary employment. Advisers and the Dr.P.H. Committee members assist in placement when students are not employed or the place of employment is not appropriate for the student’s course of study.
During the first quarter of residency students prepare a dissertation proposal that addresses a problem of interest or concern (practical relevance) to the preceptor organization. The proposal may deal with needs assessment, program design, program implementation, program evaluation, or some combination of the above. The emphasis in this problem-solving dissertation is not necessarily to test a hypothesis derived from a disciplinary or theoretical perspective but rather to address a problem defined within the context of the preceptor organization and the environment in which it interacts. Students are expected to employ competencies gained from prior education/experience and doctoral coursework in addressing this problem. The proposal is to be written, reviewed by the doctoral committee and the practicum preceptor organization, and approved during the first six months of the residency. The expectation is that the prepared project be feasible and realistic within the context and resources of the organization, and normally can be completed within one year of the beginning of the practicum.
Advancement to Candidacy
Students are advanced to candidacy upon successful completion of the written and oral qualifying examinations.
Doctoral Dissertation
Every doctoral degree program requires the completion of an approved dissertation that demonstrates the student’s ability to perform original, independent research and constitutes a distinct contribution to knowledge in the principal field of study.
Final Oral Examination (Defense of the Dissertation)
Required for all students in the program.
Time-to-Degree
Maximum allowable time for the attainment of the degree is 24 quarters of enrollment or eight years. This limitation includes quarters enrolled in previous graduate study at a UC campus prior to admission to the doctoral degree program and leaves of absence. However, the approved normative time-to-degree is 18 quarters (six years). It is expected that students will normally complete coursework by the end of the third year in residence (nine quarters); complete written and oral examinations and advance to candidacy by the middle of the fourth year in residence (11 quarters); and complete the dissertation and defense by the end of the sixth year (18 quarters).
Termination of Graduate Study and Appeal of Termination
University Policy
A student who fails to meet the above requirements may be recommended for termination of graduate study. A graduate student may be disqualified from continuing in the graduate program for a variety of reasons. The most common is failure to maintain the minimum cumulative grade point average (3.00) required by the Academic Senate to remain in good standing (some programs require a higher grade point average). Other examples include failure of examinations, lack of timely progress toward the degree and poor performance in core courses. Probationary students (those with cumulative grade point averages below 3.00) are subject to immediate dismissal upon the recommendation of their department. University guidelines governing termination of graduate students, including the appeal procedure, are outlined in Standards and Procedures for Graduate Study at UCLA.
Special Departmental or Program Policy
Master’s
In addition to the standard reasons outlined above, a student may be recommended for termination for failure to failure to complete the required course work within seven quarters of matriculation.
Doctoral
In addition to the standard reasons outlined above, a student may be recommended for termination for: failure to maintain a 3.00 grade point average for two consecutive quarters following matriculation into the doctoral program; a second failure of any written qualifying examination in the major or minor fields; a second failure of either oral examination; or exceeding enrollment time limits.
A student may appeal a recommendation for termination first to the departmental chair, then to the Associate Dean of Student Affairs, then to the Associate Dean of Academic Affairs and finally to the dean of the school.
Applicable only to students admitted during the 2013-2014 academic year.
Interdepartmental Degree Program
College of Letters and Science
The Islamic Studies Program offers the Master of Arts (M.A.) and Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) degrees in Islamic Studies.
Admission
Program Name
Islamic Studies
Islamic Studies is an interdepartmental program. Interdepartmental programs provide an integrated curriculum of several disciplines.
Address
10373 Bunche Hall
Box 951487
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1487
Phone
(310) 206-6571
idpgrads@international.ucla.edu
Leading to the degree of
M.A., Ph.D.
Admission Limited to
Fall
Deadline to apply
December 15th
GRE (General and/or Subject)
GRE: General
Letters of Recommendation
3
Other Requirements
In addition to the University’s minimum requirements and those listed above, all applicants are expected to submit a research paper or other writing sample demonstrating strong writing and analytical skills, and a statement of purpose.
M.A.: Applicants are normally expected to have completed the equivalent of one course in early Islamic history and three courses in Islamic cultures and institutions. Applicants are expected to demonstrate intermediate level proficiency in one of the major languages of countries with Muslim majorities or very large Muslim minorities, including Arabic, Berber, Hausa, Indonesian, Iranian languages, Malay, Swahili, Turkic languages, Urdu, Wolof, and Yoruba.
Applicants who have any deficiencies in these prerequisites will be considered for admission on a provisional basis for one to three quarters. If admitted on a provisional basis, these students must satisfy the prerequisite requirements by taking the appropriate courses. Courses taken to satisfy prerequisite requirements may not be applied toward a graduate degree in the program.
Islamic Studies, M.A./Public Health, M.P.H.
The Islamic Studies Program and the School of Public Health offer a concurrent degree program whereby students can obtain the Master of Arts in Islamic Studies and the Master of Public Health. Applicants interested in this concurrent program should separately contact the Islamic Studies Program and the Student Affairs Office in the School of Public Health.
Ph.D.: A master’s degree from a program with requirements equivalent to those of the M.A. at UCLA is required. Advanced-level proficiency in Arabic is also required for admission to the Ph.D. program.
Applicants who have any deficiencies in these prerequisites, will be considered for admission on a provisional basis for one to three quarters. If admitted on a provisional basis, these students must satisfy the prerequisite requirements by taking the appropriate courses. Courses taken to satisfy prerequisite requirements may not be applied toward a graduate degree in the program.
Advising
Student advising begins with admission to the program, at which time students are matched with one or more faculty members whose specialties relate to the student’s areas of interest.
During the first year, students meet quarterly with the program chair, who also serves as the graduate adviser. By the end of the first year, students must secure the agreement of a faculty member to serve as their supervisor and notify the student affairs officer of this arrangement. For the following terms of graduate study, students meet quarterly with their faculty supervisors and, as needed, with the student affairs officer.
Student progress is reviewed annually. At the beginning of Spring Quarter, all students meet with their faculty supervisors and provide them with a written summary of their progress toward the degree and their goals for the coming year. The faculty supervisors report to the interdepartmental degree committee which meets to review student progress and advises each student in writing by the end of Spring Quarter as to whether their progress is sufficient to warrant continuation in the program.
Areas of Study
These areas of study are the same as listed under Major Fields or Subdisciplines for the doctoral degree.
Foreign Language Requirement
Other than the language proficiency required for admission to the program, there is no foreign language requirement for the master’s degree. Students who plan to go on for the Ph.D. degree in this program are encouraged to achieve required levels of proficiency in their research languages early in their graduate study so that language skills will be of maximum benefit. Students should see the doctoral language requirement under Doctoral Degree.
Course Requirements
A minimum of 12 courses (48 units) is required, five (20 units) of which must be at the graduate level. Two courses in the 500 series may be applied toward the degree, one of which may be applied toward the five-graduate course requirement. All courses applied toward the degree must be taken for a letter grade.
The 12 courses must be divided among three categories of courses as follows:
Category one. Three required courses: Near Eastern Languages 201, Islamics 201, and History 200J.
Category two. Three courses that present and compare specific disciplinary approaches to, methods for, and critiques of the study of Islam and society, such as: Anthropology 271 and 273, Art History C214, History 201J, or Political Science 245. Other courses, including variable topics courses, may be chosen in consultation with the program chair.
Category three. Six courses from at least two different disciplines (not including language courses) as determined by students in consultation with their supervisor. Students also are advised to take courses that cover at least two geographic regions.
Teaching Experience
Not Required.
Field Experience
Not Required.
Comprehensive Examination Plan
The comprehensive examination requirement is fulfilled either by submitting a single paper (40-60 pages) that combines work in two or more fields of study, or by submitting one paper (maximum of 30 pages) in each of three fields. The paper or papers are evaluated by the student’s three faculty supervisors. Regardless of format, the comprehensive examination is graded, by a minimum vote of two, as (1) pass to continue for the Ph.D., (2) terminal M.A. pass, or (3) fail. Reexamination in exceptional cases will be determined by the interdepartmental degree committee.
Thesis Plan
None.
Time-to-Degree
Seven academic quarters is the expected time-to-degree for full-time students with no deficiencies upon admission.
Advising
During their first year students who directly enter the Ph.D. program meet quarterly with the program chair, who also serves as the graduate adviser. In consultation with the graduate adviser, students choose a primary faculty adviser. By the end of the first year, students choose three fields of study and the faculty with whom they will work in those fields. Students should consult with these faculty and with the student affairs officer as frequently as needed.
Students who intend to proceed from the M.A. degree to the Ph.D. degree in Islamic Studies must first fulfill all requirements for the M.A. degree and receive a pass to continue from two of the three faculty supervisors.
Student progress is reviewed annually. At the beginning of Spring Quarter, all students meet with their faculty supervisors and provide them with a written summary of their progress toward the degree and their goals for the coming year. The faculty supervisors report to the interdepartmental degree committee which meets to review student progress and advises each student in writing by the end of Spring Quarter as to whether their progress is sufficient to warrant continuation in the program.
Major Fields or Subdisciplines
Anthropology, architecture, art history, comparative literature, economics, education, ethnomusicology, film and television, geography, history, law, management, music, philosophy, political science, psychology, public health, public policy, religion, sociology, urban planning, world arts and cultures, and the literatures of the following languages: Arabic; Berber, Hausa, Indonesian, Iranian languages, Malay, Swahili, Turkic languages, Urdu, Wolof, and Yoruba.
Foreign Language Requirement
Intermediate-level proficiency in a second language listed under Major Fields or Subdisciplines and reading proficiency in a European language other than English that is relevant to the student’s research are required prior to advancement to doctoral candidacy. Students are encouraged to achieve required levels of proficiency in their research languages early in their graduate study so that language skills will be of maximum benefit.
Language proficiency may be demonstrated by (1) providing evidence of being a native speaker; (2) passing a program-administered examination; (3) completing three intermediate-level courses with a grade of B or better (these courses are not counted toward the degree); or (4) submitting evidence of completion of equivalent coursework elsewhere.
Exceptions to the language requirements may be approved in special cases. This is done through submission of a petition that must be approved by the student’s primary faculty adviser, the program chair, and the Graduate Division.
Course Requirements
A minimum of 12 courses (48 units) is required for the Ph.D. degree, including a minimum of three graduate seminars. Students who enter directly into the Ph.D. program must take the three core courses in Category one and at least one course from Category two listed under the master’s degree. Such students may petition the Committee to Administer the Islamic Studies Program to waive courses in Category one. All students must take at least four graduate and upper-division courses, including one graduate seminar, in each of three chosen fields (students should see Major Fields or Subdisciplines above). The three fields must be distributed across more than one division, college, or school. One 500-level course in each of three fields may be applied toward Ph.D. course requirements. Students must also take at least one methodology course, which may or may not be in one of the three fields, and as approved by the primary faculty adviser. All courses applied toward the degree must be taken for a letter grade.
Teaching Experience
Not Required.
Written and Oral Qualifying Examinations
Academic Senate regulations require all doctoral students to complete and pass University written and oral qualifying examinations prior to doctoral advancement to candidacy. Also, under Senate regulations the University oral qualifying examination is open only to the student and appointed members of the doctoral committee. In addition to University requirements, some graduate programs have other pre-candidacy examination requirements. What follows in this section is how students are required to fulfill all of these requirements for this doctoral program.
After students complete all coursework and foreign language requirements, the chair of the program, in consultation with the student, nominates a doctoral committee that meets university requirements, for formal appointment by the Graduate Division. The committee must include faculty from the student’s three fields plus a methodology examiner if the latter is not from one of the three fields.
Students must write a dissertation prospectus that contains (1) a full statement of the dissertation topic, including any fieldwork that may be required; (2) a historiographical discussion of the literature related to the topic; (3) a statement of the methods to be employed; and (4) a proposed bibliography to be consulted in the course of research and writing.
The doctoral committee conducts four separate written examinations, one in each of the student’s three fields and one in a methodology appropriate to the student’s dissertation. Following the written examinations, the committee conducts the University Oral Qualifying Examination, which covers the three fields, the methodology, and the basis of the dissertation prospectus. Reexamination in any field is at the discretion of the doctoral committee in consultation with the chair of the program. No single written examination shall exceed four hours.
Advancement to Candidacy
Students are advanced to candidacy and awarded the Candidate in Philosophy (C.Phil.) degree upon successful completion of the written and oral qualifying examinations.
Doctoral Dissertation
Every doctoral degree program requires the completion of an approved dissertation that demonstrates the student’s ability to perform original, independent research and constitutes a distinct contribution to knowledge in the principal field of study.
Final Oral Examination (Defense of Dissertation)
Not required for all students in the program. The decision as to whether a defense is required is made by the doctoral committee.
Time-to-Degree
For full-time students with no deficiencies upon admission or advancement to the Ph.D. program, the normative time from admission to approval of the dissertation prospectus, completion of the written and oral qualifying examinations, and advancement to candidacy, is two years. The normative time from advancement to candidacy to the final oral examination (defense of the dissertation), if required, and filing of the dissertation, is three years. Overall, the normative time from graduate admission to award of the Ph.D. degree is five years. Students who undertake field research abroad may require an additional one to two years to complete the program.
Termination of Graduate Study and Appeal of Termination
University Policy
A student who fails to meet the above requirements may be recommended for termination of graduate study. A graduate student may be disqualified from continuing in the graduate program for a variety of reasons. The most common is failure to maintain the minimum cumulative grade point average (3.00) required by the Academic Senate to remain in good standing (some programs require a higher grade point average). Other examples include failure of examinations, lack of timely progress toward the degree and poor performance in core courses. Probationary students (those with cumulative grade point averages below 3.00) are subject to immediate dismissal upon the recommendation of their department. University guidelines governing termination of graduate students, including the appeal procedure, are outlined in Standards and Procedures for Graduate Study at UCLA.
Special Departmental or Program Policy
A recommendation for termination is made by the chair of the interdepartmental degree program, upon consultation with the student’s primary faculty adviser and the student’s doctoral committee. A student may appeal a recommendation for termination to the interdepartmental degree committee.
Applicable only to students admitted during the 2013-2014 academic year.
Health and allied professionals who are unable to pursue a degree program during their regular working hours may earn the M.P.H. degree by completing coursework in intensive summer sessions and in extended weekend sessions during the academic year. Courses are taught by the faculty of the School of Public Health.
Admission
Program Name
Master of Public Health for Health Professionals
This is a specialized weekend program for health professionals with three years’ professional experience in health. Information regarding the Executive MPH and the full time MPH appear separately.
Address
36-078 CHS
Box 951772
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1772
Phone
(310) 794-7500
Leading to the degree of
M.P.H.
Admission Limited to
Fall
Deadline to apply
April 1st
GRE (General and/or Subject)
GRE: General
Letters of Recommendation
3, two from former professors and one from an employer; if no employer, three from former professors
Other Requirements
In addition to the University’s minimum requirements and those listed above, all applicants are expected to submit a statement of purpose.
Health and allied professionals who are unable to pursue a degree program during their regular working hours may earn the MPH degree by completing coursework in intensive summer sessions and in extended weekend sessions during the academic year. Courses are taught by the faculty of the School of Public Health. The department of Community Health Sciences offers the M.P.H. for Health Professionals program with concentration in health promotion and health education.
Applicants are expected to fulfill the minimum overall requirements for admission to the MPH program. In addition, they must have at least three years of professional experience or the full-time equivalent in health.
Advising
An adviser is appointed for each new master’s student by the head of the department. Student and adviser together agree upon a study list for each academic quarter and any subsequent alterations must be approved by both the adviser and the Associate Dean of Student Affairs. Students are expected to meet with their advisers each quarter.
An adviser is responsible for the student’s academic progress. Progress is evaluated on an ongoing basis. At the end of each quarter, the Associate Dean of Student Affairs reviews academic listings of students and notifies them and the advisers when the cumulative grade-point average is below 3.0. Advisers review each case with their advisees and make recommendations to the Associate Dean of Student Affairs for continuance or dismissal. Students who wish to change advisers must file a petition which must be approved by the new adviser, the department chair, and the Associate Dean for Student Affairs.
Areas of Study
Community Health Sciences offers a concentration in health education/promotion.
Foreign Language Requirement
None.
Course Requirements
Community Health Sciences
The MPH | HP degree program is an executive-style program for people with at least three years of work experience in the health care field. It is a two-year program requiring 60 units and a masters project. All students are required to complete Community Health Sciences 210, 211A-211B, 213, 281, 282, 292, 400, 482, 487, and M287. Students are also required to complete one course from each of the public health departments: Biostatistics 100A, Epidemiology 100, Health Policy and Management and Environmental Health Sciences 100.
In lieu of field training, students are required to complete a Master’s Project. The Master’s Project gives students an opportunity to apply knowledge and skills gained through coursework to a specific problem of significance in the field of health education and health promotion. This project must include original work. It is completed over a one-year period and represents 8 units (CHS 400 & CHS 482) of work. It can describe original research, design of an intervention, an evaluation design or other work. The student and supervising faculty member (Project Supervisor) negotiate the nature and parameters.
Courses taken for S/U grading may not be applied toward the degree requirements. Students must maintain an average of no less than 3.0 (B) in all courses required or elected during graduate residence at the University of California.
Teaching Experience
Not required.
Field Experience
None.
Comprehensive Examination Plan
Students must pass a departmental comprehensive examination. Students may be reexamined once. The aim of the examination, as a culminating experience, is to assess the student’s ability to select theories, methods, and techniques from across the content matter of a field, integrate and synthesize knowledge, and apply it to the solution of public health problems.
Thesis Plan
None.
Time-to-Degree
From graduate admission to award of the degree, normal progress is two years of intensive summer sessions and extended weekend sessions.
Applicable only to students admitted during the 2013-2014 academic year.
Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science
The Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering offers the Master of Science (M.S.) and Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) degrees in Civil Engineering.
Admission
Program Name
Civil Engineering
Civil Engineering is a major offered by the Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science.
Address
5732-A Boelter Hall
Box 951593
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1593
Phone
(310) 825-1851
Leading to the degree of
M.S., Ph.D.
Admission Limited to
Consult department for deadlines.
Deadline to apply
December 15th
Applications received after the deadline cannot be considered for financial aid but may be considered for admission on a space-available basis. Applications from international applicants received after December 15th will not be considered for admission due to insufficient time for processing of application and visa materials.
GRE (General and/or Subject)
GRE: General (report official scores to department code 1102)
Letters of Recommendation
3
Other Requirements
In addition to the University’s minimum requirements and those listed above, all applicants are expected to submit a statement of purpose. One official bachelor’s (and master’s, if applicable) degree transcript must be mailed directly to the departmental address. International transcripts must be issued in English, as well as the original language if applicable; the degree certificate also must show the conferral date in both languages.
M.S.: Applicants are expected to hold a B.S. degree with a minimum grade point average of 3.0 or equivalent.
Ph.D.: Applicants normally should have completed an M.S. degree program with at least a 3.25 grade-point average, and hold a B.S. degree with a minimum grade point average of 3.0 or equivalent. Normally the M.S. degree is required for admission to the Ph.D. program. Exceptional students, however, may be admitted to the Ph.D. program directly.
Advising
Each department in the Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science has a graduate adviser. A current list of graduate advisers can be obtained from the Office of the Associate Dean for Academic and Student Affairs, 6426 Boelter Hall, Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science.
Students are assigned a faculty adviser upon admission to the department. Advisers may be changed upon written request from the student. All HSSEAS faculty serve as advisers.
Provisionally admitted students meet with the program adviser upon matriculation to plan a course of study to remove any deficiencies.
New students should arrange an appointment as early as possible with their faculty adviser to plan the proposed program of study toward the M.S. degree. Continuing students are required to confer with the adviser during the time of enrollment each quarter so that progress can be assessed and the study list approved.
Based on the quarterly transcripts, student records are reviewed at the end of each quarter by the departmental graduate adviser and the Associate Dean for Academic and Student Affairs. Special attention is given if students were admitted provisionally or are on probation. If their progress is unsatisfactory, students are informed of this in writing by the Associate Dean for Academic and Student Affairs.
Students are strongly urged to consult with the departmental student office staff and/or the Office of Academic and Student Affairs regarding procedures, requirements and implementation of policies. In particular, advice should be sought on advancement to candidacy for the M.S. degree, and on the use of the Filing Fee.
Areas of Study
Civil engineering materials; environmental engineering; geotechnical engineering; hydrology and water resources engineering; structural mechanics; and structural/earthquake engineering.
Foreign Language Requirement
None.
Course Requirements
There are two plans of study that lead to the M.S. degree, the comprehensive examination and thesis plans. For both plans, at least nine courses are required, a majority of which must be in the Civil and Environmental Engineering Department. At least five of the courses must be at the 200-level. In the thesis plan, seven of the nine must be formal 100- or 200-series courses. The remaining two may be 598 courses involving work on the thesis. In the comprehensive examination plan, 500-series courses may not be applied toward the nine-course requirement. A minimum 3.0 grade-point average is required in all coursework.
Each major field has a set of required preparatory courses which are normally completed during undergraduate studies. Equivalent courses taken at other institutions can satisfy the preparatory course requirements. The preparatory courses cannot be used to satisfy course requirements for the master’s degree. Courses for the master’s degree must be selected in accordance with the lists of required graduate courses and elective courses for each major field listed below.
Undergraduate Courses. No lower division courses may be applied toward graduate degrees. In addition, the following upper division courses are not applicable toward graduate degrees: Chemical Engineering 102A, 199; Civil and Environmental Engineering 106A, 108, 199; Computer Science M152A, 152B, M171L, 199; Electrical Engineering 100, 101, 102, 103, 110L, M116L, 199; Materials Science and Engineering 110, 120, 130, 131, 131L, 132, 140, 141L, 150, 160, 161L, 199; Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering 102, 103, 105A, 105D, 199.
Civil Engineering Materials
Required Undergraduate Preparatory Courses. General chemistry and physics with laboratory exercises, multivariate calculus, linear algebra and differential equations, introductory thermodynamics. Other undergraduate preparation could include additional courses in: civil engineering (CEE 104, 120, 121, 135A, 142, 140L) and materials science (MSE 104).
Required Graduate Courses. Civil and Environmental Engineering (Select any two of the following):, C204, 226, 253, 258A, 261B, M262A, 263A, 266, 267, C282.
Other Elective Courses (Remaining courses may be selected from the following): CEE: 110, 154, 155, 157B, 157C, 163, M166, 135C, 153, 220, 224, 226, 230A/B/C, 235A/B/C, 242, 243A/B, 254A, 258A, 261, 267; Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering: 102A, 102B, 200, C219, 223, 230, 270; Chemistry and Biochemistry: 103, 110A, 110B, 113A, C213B, C215A, C215B, C215C, 215D, C223A, C223B, 225, C226A, C275, 276B, 277; Conservation of Archaeological and Ethnographic Materials: M210, M215, M216, M236, M250; Materials Science and Engineering: 110, C111, 130, 131, 200, 201, 210, C211, 270; Mechanical Engineering: 101, 105A, 131AL, 133A, 156A, C232A, 256F, 261A, 261B, 296A, 296B; Statistics: 201A
In total there must be at least four graduate courses.
Environmental Engineering
Required Preparatory Courses. Chemistry and Biochemistry 20A, 20B, 20L; Mathematics 32A 33A; Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering 103, 105A; Civil and Environmental Engineering 153; Physics 1A/4AL, 1B/4BL.
Required Graduate Courses. Civil and Environmental Engineering 254A, 255A, 255B, 266.
Major Elective Courses (A minimum of two courses must be selected). Civil and Environmental Engineering 110, 154, 155, 157B, 157C, 163, M166, 226, 253, 258A, 261B, M262A, 263A, 266, 267, M165.
Other Elective Courses (Remaining courses may be selected from the following). Biostatistics M220, Civil and Environmental Engineering 150, 151, 250A, 250B, 250C, 250D, 251A, 251B, 251C, 251D, 252, 260, M262B; Chemical Engineering 101C, 106, 210, C218, 220, C240; Chemistry and Biochemistry 110A, 110B, CM227; Computer Science 270A, 271A, 271B; Earth and Space Sciences C206, C209, C213; Electrical Engineering 236A, 236B, 236C; Environmental Health Sciences 212, C225, C240, C252D, 255, C264, 410A, 410B; Statistics 201A. Other elective courses may be substituted with the approval of the student’s academic adviser and the graduate adviser.
Geotechnical Engineering
Required Preparatory Courses. Civil and Environmental Engineering 108, 120, 121.
Required Graduate Courses. Civil and Environmental Engineering 220, 221, 223, 224.
Major Elective Courses (A minimum of three courses must be selected). Civil and Environmental Engineering 123,128L, 222, 225, 226, 227, 245.
Elective Courses (Remaining courses may be selected from the following): General: Civil and Environmental Engineering 110, 129, Earth and Space Sciences 135, 136A, 136B, 136C, 139, 222. Environmental Engineering: Civil and Environmental Engineering 153, 164. Hydrology and Water Resources Engineering: Civil and Environmental Engineering 250B and 251B. Structural Mechanics: Civil and Environmental Engineering M230A. Structural/Earthquake Engineering: Civil and Environmental Engineering 135A, 135B, 137, 142, 235A, 235B, 235C, 243A, 243B, 246, 247.
Hydrology and Water Resources Engineering
Required Preparatory Courses. Chemistry and Biochemistry 20A, 20B, 20L; Mathematics 32A, 32B, 33A, 33B; Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering 103, 105A; Civil and Environmental Engineering 151; Physics 1A/4AL, 1B/4BL, 1C.
Required Graduate Courses. Civil and Environmental Engineering 250A, 250B, 250C, 250D.
Major Elective Courses (A minimum of three courses must be selected). Civil and Environmental Engineering 251A, 251B, 251C, 251D, 252, 253, 260.
Elective Courses. Up to two courses from the following list: Civil and Environmental Engineering 110, 150, 153, 157L, 157M, 164, 254A, 255A, 255B, 263A, 265A, 265B. Selected courses from the following departments (must be approved by faculty advisor and graduate vice chair): Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, Computer Science, Earth and Space Sciences, Electrical Engineering, Geography, Mathematics, Statistics, and Urban Planning.
Structural Mechanics
Required Preparatory Courses. Civil and Environmental Engineering 130, 135A, 135B.
Required Graduate Courses. Civil and Environmental Engineering 232, 235A, 235B, 236, M237A.
Elective Courses. Undergraduate: Civil and Environmental Engineering M135C, 137, and 137L (two maximum); Graduate: Civil and Environmental Engineering M230A, M230B, M230C, 233, 235C, 238, 246, 247, Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering 269B.
Structural/Earthquake Engineering
Required Preparatory Courses. Civil and Environmental Engineering 135A and 135B, 141 or 142 (at least one).
Required Graduate Courses. Civil and Environmental Engineering 235A and 246 and at least three of the following courses: Civil and Environmental Engineering 235B, 241, 243A, 245, 247.
Elective Courses. Undergraduate: Civil and Environmental Engineering 125, M135C, 137, 141, 142 and 143, 143 (two maximum). Geotechnical Area: Civil and Environmental Engineering 220, 221, 222, 223, 225, 227 (three maximum). General Graduate: Civil and Environmental Engineering M230A, M230B, M230C, 232, 233, 235B, 235C, 236, M237A, 238, 241, 243A, 243B, 245, 247, Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering 269B.
Students may petition the department for permission to pursue programs of study which differ from the above norms.
Teaching Experience
Not required.
Field Experience
Not required.
Comprehensive Examination Plan
In addition to the course requirements, under the comprehensive examination plan there is a comprehensive written examination covering the subject matter contained in the program of study. The examination is administered by a comprehensive examination committee, which may conduct an oral examination in addition to the written examination. In case of failure, the examination may be repeated once with the consent of the graduate adviser.
Thesis Plan
Every master’s degree thesis plan requires the completion of an approved thesis that demonstrates the student’s ability to perform original, independent research.
In addition to the course requirements, under the thesis plan students are required to write a thesis on a research topic in civil and environmental engineering supervised by the thesis adviser. A thesis committee reviews and approves the thesis. No oral examination is required.
Time-to-Degree
The average duration for full-time students in the M.S. program is three quarters. The maximum time allowed for completing the M.S. degree is three years from the time of admission to the M.S. program in the School.
Advising
Each department in the Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science has a graduate adviser. A current list of graduate advisers can be obtained from the Office of the Associate Dean for Academic and Student Affairs, 6426 Boelter Hall, Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science.
Students are assigned a faculty adviser upon admission to the department. Advisers may be changed upon written request from the student. All HSSEAS faculty serve as advisers.
New students should arrange an appointment as early as possible with the faculty adviser to plan the proposed program of study toward the Ph.D. degree. Continuing students are required to confer with the adviser during the time of enrollment each quarter so that progress can be assessed and the study list approved.
Based on the quarterly transcripts, student records are reviewed at the end of each quarter by the departmental graduate adviser and Associate Dean for Academic and Student Affairs. Special attention is given if students were admitted provisionally or are on probation. If their progress is unsatisfactory, students are informed of this in writing by the Associate Dean for Academic and Student Affairs.
Students are strongly urged to consult with the departmental student office staff and/or the Office of Academic and Student Affairs regarding procedures, requirements and the implementation of policies. In particular, advice should be sought on the procedures for taking Ph.D. written and oral examinations, and on the use of the Filing Fee.
Major Fields or Subdisciplines
Civil engineering materals; environmental engineering; geotechnical engineering; hydrology and water resources engineering; structures (includes structural mechanics and structural/earthquake engineering).
Foreign Language Requirement
None.
Course Requirements
There is no formal course requirement for the Ph.D. degree, and one may theoretically substitute coursework by examinations. Normally, however, the student takes courses to acquire the knowledge needed for the written preliminary examinations. The basic program of study for the Ph.D. degree is built around one major field and one super-minor field or two minor fields. The major field has a scope corresponding to a body of knowledge contained in a detailed Ph.D. field syllabus available on request from the department office. A super-minor field is comprised of a body of knowledge equivalent to five courses, at least three of which are at the graduate level. When two minor fields are selected, each minor field is normally comprised of a body of knowledge equivalent to three courses, at least two of which are at the graduate level. The minimum acceptable grade point average for the minor fields is 3.33 and no individual grade counting toward the minor can be below. If the student fails to satisfy the minor field requirements through coursework, a minor field examination may be taken (once only). The minor fields are chosen to support the major field and are usually subsets of other major fields.
For information on completing the Engineer degree, see Engineering Schoolwide Programs.
Teaching Experience
Not required.
Written and Oral Qualifying Examinations
Academic Senate regulations require all doctoral students to complete and pass University written and oral qualifying examinations prior to doctoral advancement to candidacy. Also, under Senate regulations the University oral qualifying examination is open only to the student and appointed members of the doctoral committee. In addition to University requirements, some graduate programs have other pre-candidacy examination requirements. What follows in this section is how students are required to fulfill all of these requirements for this doctoral program.
After mastering the body of knowledge defined in the major field, the student takes a written preliminary examination in the major field. This preliminary examination should be completed within the first two years of full-time enrollment in the Ph.D. program. Students may not take an examination more than twice.
After passing the preliminary examination and substantially completing all minor field coursework, the student is eligible to take the University Oral Qualifying Examination. The nature and content of the examination are at the discretion of the doctoral committee but ordinarily include a broad inquiry into the student’s preparation for research. The doctoral committee also reviews the prospectus of the dissertation at the oral qualifying examination.
Students nominate a doctoral committee prior to taking the University Oral Qualifying Examination. The doctoral committee consists of a minimum of four members. Three members, including the chair, must hold appointments at UCLA in the student’s major department in the School of Engineering and Applied Science. The outside member must be a UCLA faculty member outside the student’s major department.
Advancement to Candidacy
Students are advanced to candidacy upon successful completion of the written preliminary and oral qualifying examinations.
Doctoral Dissertation
Every doctoral degree program requires the completion of an approved dissertation that demonstrates the student’s ability to perform original, independent research and constitutes a distinct contribution to knowledge in the principal field of study.
Final Oral Examination (Defense of Dissertation)
Required for all students in the program.
Time-to-Degree
From admission to graduate status (includes M.S. degree) to award of the Ph.D. degree: 18 quarters (normative time to degree).
Termination of Graduate Study and Appeal of Termination
University Policy
A student who fails to meet the above requirements may be recommended for termination of graduate study. A graduate student may be disqualified from continuing in the graduate program for a variety of reasons. The most common is failure to maintain the minimum cumulative grade point average (3.00) required by the Academic Senate to remain in good standing (some programs require a higher grade point average). Other examples include failure of examinations, lack of timely progress toward the degree and poor performance in core courses. Probationary students (those with cumulative grade point averages below 3.00) are subject to immediate dismissal upon the recommendation of their department. University guidelines governing termination of graduate students, including the appeal procedure, are outlined in Standards and Procedures for Graduate Study at UCLA.
Special Departmental or Program Policy
A recommendation for termination is reviewed by the school’s Associate Dean for Academic and Student Affairs.
Master’s
In addition to the standard reasons noted above, a student may be recommended for termination for
(1) Failure to maintain a grade point average of 3.0 in all courses and in those in the 200 series.
(2) Failure to maintain a grade point average of 3.0 in any two consecutive terms.
(3) Failure of the comprehensive examination.
(4) Failure to complete the thesis to the satisfaction of the committee members.
(5) Failure to maintain satisfactory progress toward the degree within the three-year time limit for completing all degree requirements.
Doctoral
In addition to the standard reasons noted above, a student may be recommended for termination for
(1) Failure to maintain a grade point average of 3.25 in all courses and in any two consecutive quarters.
(2) Failure of the major field written preliminary examination.
(3) Failure to maintain a minimum grade point average of 3.33 in the minor field course work.
(4) Failure of the oral qualifying examination.
(5) Failure of the final oral examination (defense of the dissertation).
(6) Failure to obtain permission to repeat an examination from an examining committee.
(7) Failure to maintain satisfactory progress toward the degree within the specified time limits.
Applicable only to students admitted during the 2013-2014 academic year.
School of the Arts and Architecture
The Department of Architecture and Urban Design offers the Master of Architecture I (M.Arch. I) and Master of Architecture II (M.Arch. II) degrees, and the Master of Arts (M.A.) and Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) degrees in Architecture.
Architecture
Admission
Program Name
Architecture
Please note that the 10-month M.Arch. II Architecture — M.Arch.II is offered in a separate major.
Address
1317 Perloff Hall
Box 951467
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1467
Phone
(310) 825-0525
Leading to the degree of
M.Arch., M.A., Ph.D.
Admission Limited to
Fall
Deadline to apply
December 15th
GRE (General and/or Subject)
GRE: General
Letters of Recommendation
3
Other Requirements
In addition to the University’s minimum requirements and those listed above, all applicants are expected to submit a statement of purpose, creative portfolio, and the departmental supplement.
For applicants whose native language is not English, a score of at least 98 (iBT), 580 (paper and pencil test) or 237 (computer-based test) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) or an overall band score of 7.0 on the International English Testing System (IELTS) examination is required for admission.
Master of Architecture I: Accepts applications from students with a broad diversity of backgrounds. Although no formal training in architecture is required, first-year classes assume some familiarity with the history and culture of architecture, possession of basic graphics skills, and understanding of fundamental concepts of mathematics and physics. Applicants are also strongly advised to become familiar with basic works in the history and theory of architecture before entering the program. Therefore, applicants must have taken at least one college-level course in each of the following areas: Newtonian physics; mathematics (covering algebra plus geometry or trigonometry); a university survey of the history of architecture (minimum one semester or two quarters) encompassing examples from antiquity to the present; and drawing or basic design. Applicants should contact the graduate adviser for further information on these prerequisites.
The Admissions Committee considers applications from those who do not have these prerequisites at the time of application. Such applicants must specify how they plan to complete the prerequisites before entry into the program. The graduate adviser can provide guidance on how to do so. Admission is only offered on the condition that the applicant produce satisfactory evidence of having completed prerequisites before commencing classes. Instructors may test background in these areas before admitting students to certain courses. If applicants lack this necessary proficiency, they may need to spend an additional year fulfilling curricular requirements.
The M.Arch. I program is a full-time program and does not accept part-time students.
Architecture M.Arch. I /Urban Planning, M.U.R.P.
The Department of Architecture and Urban Design in the School of the Arts and Architecture and the Department of Urban Planning in the School of Public Policy and Social Research offer a concurrent plan of study providing an integrated curriculum for architects interested in specializing in social, economic, and environmental policy issues and for urban planners interested in integrating architecture and urban design into policy and planning practice. Education in planning offers an overview of theories and methods that permit identification and treatment of urban problems; education in architecture stresses physical, aesthetic and technical issues in the design of buildings and building complexes. In the program, a student pursues studies in both schools/departments and receives both the Master of Architecture Degree (M.Arch. I) and the Master of Urban and Regional Planning Degree in Urban Planning (M.U.R.P.) at the end of four years.
A student who is interested in the concurrent degree program, must apply and be admitted to the M.Arch. I Program in the Department of Architecture and Urban Design, and the M.U.R.P. Program in the Department of Urban Planning.
For additional information, applicants should contact the graduate advisers in the Department of Urban Planning and in the Department of Architecture and Urban Design.
Master of Architecture II: The M.Arch. II degree is a second professional degree program in Architecture and Urban Design and emphasizes advanced studies in architecture and urban design and requires that applicants hold a five-year Bachelor of Architecture degree or the equivalent.
M.A.: The M.A. program in Architecture offers an academic degree and prepares students to do specialized research or teaching in fields related to the architecture profession. Applicants should possess the experience and knowledge that would allow advanced research in whatever aspect of architecture they plan to explore within the context of the master’s program.
It may be possible for an M.A. student in Architecture to petition to transfer from the M.A. to the Ph.D. program.
Ph.D.: Applicants should have completed a first professional degree in architecture (a five-year Bachelor of Architecture degree or a professional Master of Architecture degree). Applicants who hold degrees in other fields also are encouraged to apply; however, at the discretion of the Ph.D. Program Committee, they may be required to complete specific coursework in the department as a condition of admission.
In addition to requirements listed above, the application dossier must include (1) a short biographical resume; (2) examples of research and/or creative work; and (3) a proposed program of studies.
Where feasible, the Ph.D. Program Committee may require an interview.
Admission to the program is granted to a small group each year, according to the following criteria:
(1) Evidence of capacity for original scholarship and research in architecture, and ability to achieve eminence in the field.
(2) Demonstration of an outstanding academic record through the evidence of grades (3.5 minimum grade-point average), GRE scores, and references.
(3) Demonstration of adequate communication skills, particularly in writing, in the work submitted.
(4) Presentation of a clear and realistic statement of purpose.
Advising
Students are assigned a temporary adviser upon entering the department and select a permanent faculty adviser when they are ready to do so. The faculty member meets with students at least once each quarter and discusses the curriculum, approves selection of courses, and is available for special counseling as needed. Students who wish to change their adviser should obtain the consent of the new faculty adviser and discuss this change with the graduate adviser. The faculty adviser and the staff graduate adviser work together in explaining curricular requirements and in dealing with any personal or academic difficulties that may occur.
Areas of Study
None.
Foreign Language Requirement
None.
Course Requirements
A minimum of 126 units of coursework is required of which at least 114 units must be taken at the graduate level (200 and 400 series). Students must take at least eight units per quarter and may take up to 16 units in a quarter. The remaining 12 units of required coursework may include upper division undergraduate courses but these must be courses offered by departments other than Architecture and Urban Design, or no more than eight units of 596 (independent study) courses that may be taken campuswide.
Required Courses. All students must successfully complete the following courses:
Architecture and Urban Design M201, 220, 291, 401, 403A-403B-403C, 411, 412, 413, 414, 415, 431, 432, 433, 436, 437, 441, 442, 461, and three courses in Critical Studies in Architectural Culture.
Design Studios. Design studios offered for M.Arch. I students are classified in three levels: introductory (411), intermediate (412, 413, 414), and advanced (401, 403A-403B-403C, 415).
If students maintain at least a B average in these studio levels, they automatically pass from the introductory to the intermediate level, from the intermediate level to the advanced level, and from the advanced level to the comprehensive examination. Students who do not maintain a B average in these studio levels are reviewed by a faculty committee, and are not permitted to advance unless explicitly allowed by that committee.
Waiving Required Courses. Students who believe they can demonstrate that they already have adequate background in topics covered by specific required courses may petition to waive those courses and replace them with electives. However, permission to waive required courses does not, in itself, reduce the minimum number of 126 units required for the M.Arch. I degree, nor does it reduce the nine-quarter residency requirement.
A petition to waive an individual required course should be addressed to the faculty member responsible for that course and may be granted at the faculty member’s discretion, possibly by means of a special examination. The petition should present evidence of adequate background in the specific topic of the course, preferably through a transcript and a syllabus of the course.
Independent Study. Students may apply eight units of 596 coursework toward the elective course requirements for graduation. All independent work with 500-series course numbers must be undertaken with the guidance and approval of a departmental faculty member who evaluates the work on a satisfactory/unsatisfactory basis.
Course of Study. A normal, three-year path through the curriculum is listed below. Required courses other than design studios are normally only offered once a year, so failure to successfully complete one of these courses at the point shown may lengthen the time required to complete the program. Sections of Architecture and Urban Design 401, required studios, are normally available each quarter. Students are required to take the following courses, in the sequence indicated.
First Year:
Fall: Architecture and Urban Design M201, 220, 411, 436.
Winter: Architecture and Urban Design 412, 431, elective.
Spring: Architecture and Urban Design 413, 432, 442.
Second Year:
Fall: Architecture and Urban Design 414, 433, elective.
Winter: Architecture and Urban Design 415, 437, elective.
Spring: Architecture and Urban Design 401, 441, 461 (or M404).
Third Year:
Fall: Architecture and Urban Design 291, 401, 403A, elective.
Winter: Architecture and Urban Design 401, 403B, one elective.
Spring: Two electives, Architecture and Urban Design 403C.
Architecture M.Arch. I /Urban Planning, M.A.
During the first year a student follows the required urban planning curriculum. The second year is entirely in Architecture/Urban Design. The third and fourth years comprise a mix of both Architecture/Urban Design and Urban Planning courses, with the final design or written thesis or client or comprehensive project carried out in the fourth year.
A total of 39 courses (26 four-unit, nine six-unit, and four two-unit courses) or 166 units of coursework is required to graduate. A student will take at least 36 units in Urban Planning and 110 units in Architecture and Urban Design to satisfy the specific requirements of each degree, including core courses in both programs and area of concentration courses from each program. To fulfill the core requirements for the M.A. degree in Urban Planning a student must take six core courses, plus one course related to planning practice or fieldwork. In Architecture and Urban Design a student will take 22 core courses (nine six-unit, nine four-unit, and four two-unit courses). In addition a student will take eight elective courses including three electives in the area of critical studies in architectural culture and five electives that fulfill the needs of the selected area of concentration. These may be chosen from courses offered in Architecture/Urban Design and Urban Planning, which have been identified as acceptable to both programs. To fulfill the comprehensive examination requirement in Architecture and Urban Design, students are required to take Architecture and Urban Design 403A-403B-403C in the fourth year. An additional one or two courses may be needed in the fourth year to meet the Urban Planning thesis/comprehensive examination requirement. Thirty-two units of coursework, or eight elective courses, are double-counted in both Architecture and Urban Design and Urban Planning.
If a student is in the concurrent degree program and decides not to complete either the M.Arch. I degree or the M.A. degree, all the regular requirements for the program that a student wishes to complete must be met.
Teaching Experience
Not required.
Field Experience
Not required.
Comprehensive Examination Plan
All M. Arch.I students must complete the comprehensive examination, a requirement that is satisfied as follows:
The comprehensive examination requirement is fulfilled through the completion of Architecture and Urban Design 403C in Spring Quarter and the final design project for this course. The examination committee consists of at least three faculty members appointed by the department chair. The examination is administered and evaluated for satisfactory performance by the examination committee. The committee evaluates the final design projects in the following terms: pass (a unanimous vote), pass subject to revision of the final design project, or fail (majority vote). No reexaminations are permitted. When the final design project is passed subject to revision, one member of the committee is assigned the responsibility of working with the student on the revision and determining when the final design project has been satisfactorily revised.
Two positive votes from the committee constitute a pass on the comprehensive examination. No reexaminations are permitted. The degree is awarded on recommendation of the faculty committee.
Architecture M.Arch.I /Urban Planning, M.A.
Students in the concurrent degree program must meet the thesis/comprehensive examination requirements separately for each department. In Architecture and Urban Design the comprehensive examination requirement is met through Architecture and Urban Design 403A-403B-403C, as outlined above. In Urban Planning, students may fulfill the requirement through (1) a thesis (an original piece of research of publishable length and quality); (2) a client project; or (3) a comprehensive examination. Students are encouraged to choose a topic that integrates planning and policy aspects with design. Two separate comprehensive examination/thesis committees must be formed (one from each department). These two committees must evaluate and vote separately on the two separate comprehensive examinations/theses.
Thesis Plan
None.
Time-to-Degree
The normal length of time for completion of the M.Arch. I degree is nine academic quarters (three years).
Advising
Students working toward the M.A. degree are assigned a temporary adviser upon entering the school and select a permanent faculty adviser when they are ready to do so. Students who wish to change their adviser should obtain the consent of the new faculty adviser and discuss this change with the staff graduate adviser. The faculty adviser and the staff graduate adviser work together in explaining curricular requirements and in dealing with any personal or academic difficulties that may occur.
There is no formal review process established for students in the M.A. program. Individual faculty advisers make final determinations regarding which courses students are permitted to take, and also approve the decision to begin thesis work.
Students meet with their faculty adviser and with the graduate adviser at least once a quarter. Records are not usually kept in regard to these meetings, unless the end product of a meeting is a written petition or document.
Areas of Study
Students are required to focus their work on a specific academic area or professional issue. Specializations are currently available in critical studies in architectural culture and in technology. In addition, students have the option of the open M.A. degree whereby they structure their own area of interest from the courses offered by the department.
Foreign Language Requirement
None.
Course Requirements
Candidates for the M.A. degree are expected to be in residence at UCLA for two years and undertake six quarters of study. Students must choose and pursue one area of specialization. A thesis is required. When the committee members have signed the thesis proposal, students may sign up for four and no more than eight units of Architecture and Urban Design 598 and begin work on the thesis itself. The course should be taken at some point during the last year of study.
Students are required to complete a minimum of 16 courses (64 units) of graduate or upper division work. At least five (20 units) of these courses must be 200-series courses and at least two (eight units) must be 500-series courses. No more than 20 units of 500-level courses may be counted toward the total unit requirement for the degree. Up to seven courses may be taken from upper division (undergraduate) or graduate courses offered campus wide. Students who choose the area of critical studies in architectural culture as their area of specialization are required to take a total of 30 units of Architecture and Urban Design 290 as part of their requirement for graduation. This set of six five-unit courses must be completed by the end of the sixth quarter of residency.
Students must enroll in at least four and no more than eight units of course 598. Students may also apply 12 units of course 596 toward the unit requirements for graduation. Courses in the 400 series may not be applied toward the graduate course requirement for the M.A. degree, but a limited number may be applied toward elective course requirements.
Teaching Experience
Not required.
Field Experience
Not required.
Comprehensive Examination Plan
None.
Thesis Plan
Every master’s degree thesis plan requires the completion of an approved thesis that demonstrates the student’s ability to perform original, independent research.
All M.A. students must complete a master’s thesis.
Time-to-Degree
The average length of study for the M.A. degree is six academic quarters (two years).
Advising
Students are assigned an adviser at the beginning of the Fall Quarter of their first year. A formal evaluation of the research skills of all students is carried out no earlier than the second quarter of residence, and no later than the fourth quarter. Student progress is reviewed annually by the Ph.D. Program Committee.
Continuing students may petition to transfer from the M.A. to the Ph.D. program before completion of the M.A. thesis, but approval is granted only in exceptional cases. The student should consult the primary adviser to determine the feasibility of transfer from one degree program to another. If the primary adviser so recommends, an M.A. student may petition the Ph.D. Program Committee at the end of the fourth quarter. The request must be accompanied by a current transcript, a research sample, a research proposal, and a short written report by the primary adviser. Based on these materials the Ph.D. Program Committee recommends one of the following: a) immediate admission into the Ph.D. program; b) completion of a thesis leading to an M.A. degree and the option thereafter to apply separately for admission into the Ph.D. program; or c) that the student takes a terminal M.A. degree.
Major Fields or Subdisciplines
Major Field
Students are required to undertake a program of study that includes one major area, either critical studies in architectural culture or in technology.
Majors outside these areas, or a combination of the two, may be undertaken, subject to the approval of the Ph.D. Program Committee, if supported by qualified departmental faculty members who are available and willing to provide the necessary instruction and guidance.
Each major field is organized and coordinated by a major field committee consisting of faculty and students with active interests in that area. It is the responsibility of the field committee to initiate research programs, organize discussions, make curriculum and staffing recommendations, and serve as a source of consultation, guidance, and stimulation for the student.
Minor Field
Students are required to include in the program of study at least one minor field which must be chosen from outside of the department. The objectives of the minor field requirement are to ensure that Ph.D. students have academic breadth in their preparation, and to encourage them to participate in the general intellectual life of the University. In planning minor field work, students are advised in accord with these objectives, and the choice must be approved by the adviser.
Due to the wide diversity of backgrounds of Ph.D. students in architecture, it is appropriate to allow some flexibility in requirements for completion of the minor. The normal method of demonstrating competence in the minor field is to complete at least 16 units of coursework, with a grade of B or better, which represents a unified course of study in that field. If a qualified departmental faculty member is willing to provide the necessary supervision, the Ph.D. Program Committee, in consultation with that faculty member and the student, may accept an alternative method of completing this requirement; for example, a substantial research project. Any proposal to complete the minor by an alternative method must explicitly demonstrate, to the satisfaction of the Ph.D. Program Committee, that the objectives of the minor field requirement are met.
Foreign Language Requirement
Students are expected to develop adequate skills in one foreign language as appropriate to their field of specialization, and as approved by the Ph.D. Program Committee, and are strongly advised to complete this requirement as early as possible. Students may fulfill the foreign language requirement in French, German, or Italian by completing, with grades of B or better, coursework in the approved language to level 4, or by passing the equivalent placement examination in the appropriate foreign language department. The student’s doctoral adviser or the Ph.D. Program Committee may recommend that other languages be taken if needed for the student’s research.
Courses applied toward satisfaction of the language requirement may not be applied toward satisfaction of a major or minor field requirement.
Course Requirements
Students must be in residence in the Ph.D. program a minimum of two years. This is an absolute minimum; longer residence requirements apply to most students, as detailed below. In general, students are required to take sufficient coursework to provide adequate preparation for the qualifying examinations and the dissertation. Minimum course unit requirements are as follows:
All candidates are required to complete six quarters in residence and 72 units of coursework. For these required 72 units, at least 50 percent must be in courses in architecture and urban design. Students are required to maintain an overall grade-point average of 3.0 or better in all courses. The Ph.D. is an academic degree and therefore it is expected that a substantial proportion of the coursework will be completed in the 200 series; the minimum requirement is for at least 32 units of coursework to be in 200 series. No more than eight units of Architecture and Urban Design 596 and eight units of 597 may be applied toward degree requirements; as many units of 599 as necessary may be applied. Students who choose the area of critical studies in architectural culture as their area of specialization are required to take a total of 30 units of Architecture and Urban Design 290 as part of their requirement for graduation. This set of six five-unit courses must be completed by the end of the sixth quarter of residency. Ph.D. students with no prior background in architecture are strongly recommended to take a summer studio course at UCLA.
Students who hold a professional degree in architecture before admission to the program are required to complete four quarters in residence and 48 units of coursework in order to establish eligibility to take the qualifying examinations.
Students who hold an M.Arch. I, M.Arch. II, or M.A. degree in Architecture and Urban Design from the department may petition the Ph.D. Program Committee to reduce these course requirements to a minimum of three quarters in residence and 36 units of coursework. Decisions on these petitions are at the discretion of the committee.
Teaching Experience
Not required.
Written and Oral Qualifying Examinations
Academic Senate regulations require all doctoral students to complete and pass University written and oral qualifying examinations prior to doctoral advancement to candidacy. Also, under Senate regulations the University oral qualifying examination is open only to the student and appointed members of the doctoral committee. In addition to University requirements, some graduate programs have other pre-candidacy examination requirements. What follows in this section is how students are required to fulfill all of these requirements for this doctoral program.
Students may take the two qualifying examinations after successful completion of (1) the first-year review evaluating research skills; (2) the mathematics, computing, or foreign language requirement; and (3) the coursework requirements, as detailed above. The committee application includes an outline and brief discussion of the proposed dissertation.
The purpose of the qualifying examinations is for students to demonstrate a broad mastery of the field of architecture, the required levels of competence in the major and minor fields, and the appropriateness of and adequate preparation for the proposed dissertation topic. The examinations consist of the following parts:
(1) The written and oral examination in the major field.
The written examination in the major field is a substantial exercise that is followed by an oral presentation to the examination committee. The standard for successful completion of this examination is for students to demonstrate that they have achieved the level of competence of a scholar specializing in the field, could teach an introductory course in the field, and can contribute to the progress of the field through scholarship and research.
The major field examination is conducted by a three-member examination committee appointed by the chair of the department on the advice of the Ph.D. Program Committee. The examination committee consists of faculty with regular appointments who also will serve as the inside members of the doctoral committee.
A student will fail the oral examination in the major field if more than one committee member votes not passed, regardless of the size of the committee. If a majority of the examining committee so recommends, the examination in the major field may be repeated once within an established time frame. Students may not replace more than one original committee member with a new member in the reconstituted committee. Students who do not meet these requirements within the time frame will be recommended for termination.
(2) The University Oral Qualifying Examination which focuses primarily on the subject of the proposed dissertation.
The University Oral Qualifying Examination is conducted by the appointed doctoral committee and explores the proposed dissertation topic and the ability to undertake the proposed work successfully.
Advancement to Candidacy
Students are advanced to candidacy upon successful completion of the written and oral qualifying examinations.
Doctoral Dissertation
Every doctoral degree program requires the completion of an approved dissertation that demonstrates the student’s ability to perform original, independent research and constitutes a distinct contribution to knowledge in the principal field of study.
Final Oral Examination (Defense of Dissertation)
Required for all students in the program.
Time-to-Degree
Students are expected to receive their degree within six years (18 quarters) from admission into the program, and must be registered continuously or on official leave of absence during this period. Students who do not register and are not on official leave automatically lose their status in the program.
Termination of Graduate Study and Appeal of Termination
University Policy
A student who fails to meet the above requirements may be recommended for termination of graduate study. A graduate student may be disqualified from continuing in the graduate program for a variety of reasons. The most common is failure to maintain the minimum cumulative grade point average (3.00) required by the Academic Senate to remain in good standing (some programs require a higher grade point average). Other examples include failure of examinations, lack of timely progress toward the degree and poor performance in core courses. Probationary students (those with cumulative grade point averages below 3.00) are subject to immediate dismissal upon the recommendation of their department. University guidelines governing termination of graduate students, including the appeal procedure, are outlined in Standards and Procedures for Graduate Study at UCLA.
Special Departmental or Program Policy
Academic Probation for M.Arch. I Students
In addition to University policy, M.Arch. I students are required to maintain a 3.00 average in studio coursework. Students who fall below a 3.00 average in overall coursework or below a 3.00 average in studio coursework are placed on departmental academic probation. Students on academic probation are required to attend bi-weekly meetings with their faculty adviser and the graduate adviser and are required to be assigned a student mentor. Students are free to choose their own faculty adviser with the consent of the graduate adviser. The department wants all students to succeed and indeed to excel in all of their academic endeavors. Therefore, academic probation is intended to identify weaknesses and help students move forward through special support and remedial action.
Recommendations for Termination for M.Arch. I Students
Students whose overall grade-point average or grade-point average in studio coursework falls below 3.00 in two consecutive quarters are subject to a review to determine whether they will be recommended for termination of graduate study to the Graduate Division. No student will be subject to such a recommendation on the basis of a single grade of B- in a studio course.
At the beginning of each academic year, the department’s Executive Committee selects a standing committee charged with reviewing all students subject to a recommendation for termination. The members of the standing committee serve in this capacity for a minimum of one academic year. The standing committee consists of three ladder faculty members: the department chair and two other ladder faculty members. A student’s individual faculty adviser may serve as an additional member and consultant to the standing committee.
Once a potential recommendation for termination arises, the following procedures begin. Students receive additional academic advising and documentation of this advising, in the form of reports from the staff graduate adviser and the student’s individual faculty adviser, that are placed in the student’s file. Students meet with the standing committee at least once during the process and in addition to their faculty adviser, they may invite other faculty members to attend their meeting(s). The standing committee makes their recommendations in writing. If the committee chooses not to recommend termination, they must provide the student with a clear timetable for required improvements in performance. Students who fail to meet these requirements are recommended for termination based on a majority vote of the standing committee.
Applicable only to students admitted during the 2013-2014 academic year.
College of Letters and Science
The Cesar E. Chavez Department of Chicana and Chicano Studies offers the Master of Arts (M.A.) and Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) degrees in Chicana and Chicano Studies.
Admission
Program Name
Chicana and Chicano Studies
Address
7349 Bunche Hall
Box 951559
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1559
Phone
(310) 206-7695
Leading to the degree of
M.A., Ph.D.
The department admits only applicants whose objective is the Ph.D.
Admission Limited to
Fall
Deadline to apply
December 15th
GRE (General and/or Subject)
GRE: General
Letters of Recommendation
3
Other Requirements
In addition to the University’s minimum requirements and those listed above, all applicants are required to submit a statement of purpose (up to three pages) and a writing sample (no more than 25 pags). Evidence of creative work relevant to the degree program may also be included.
Advising
The Vice Chair for Graduate Studies is assigned as provisional adviser to all incoming M.A. students until a permanent faculty adviser is selected in the second year. The faculty adviser assists students with planning their program of study. Students are expected to meet with their faculty adviser at least once a quarter, usually at the beginning of the quarter to have their enrollment plan approved. The student affairs officer provides assistance with policy and procedure.
Areas of Study
At the Master’s level, students are expected to master one interdisciplinary area of study from among the following: 1) Border and transnational studies; 2) Expressive arts; 3) History, culture, and language of the Americas; and 4) Labor, law, and policy studies.
Foreign Language Requirement
See under Doctoral Degree.
Course Requirements
The M.A. degree in Chicana/o Studies is not intended to be a stand-alone, terminal degree, but is rather, a requirement for the Ph.D. Students admitted to the Ph.D. program without an M.A. degree should follow Plan A.
Plan A
Students must successfully complete a total of 36 units (normally nine courses), completed while in graduate status and taker for a letter grade with a minimum of 3.5 grade-point average. Of the 36 units, at least 28 must be completed at the graduate level. Up to 8 units of upper division undergraduate courses may be applied to the 36-unit requirement. One 500-series course (up to four units) may be applied toward the 36-unit requirement.
Required courses:
Chicana/o Studies 200 and 201 to be taken in the first year.
One graduate methodology course in the first area of study.
Three seminars, one of which may be an upper division course, in the first area of study.
Eight elective units (2 courses) may be an upper division course or taken outside the department.
Four units of Chicana/o Studies 598 (master’s thesis research) or 597 (examination preparation).
Teaching assistants may enroll in Chicana/o Studies 495 when they receive their first teaching appointment and must enroll in Chicana/o Studies 375 each quarter in which they hold a teaching appointment. Neither of these courses may be counted toward the degree requirements.
Students accepted to the PhD program who already have a master’s degree, must submit their Master’s thesis and/or their coursework once admitted to the program. The Department’s Graduate Committee will evaluate the submitted material to determine whether or not it fulfills the M.A. requirements of our program. If the Master’s is deemed satisfactory, the student will be allowed to enter the Ph.D. program under Plan B (see Doctoral Degree requirements below).
The minimum course load is 12 units per quarter. Students must be continuously registered and enrolled unless they are on an approved leave of absence.
Teaching Experience
Not required.
Field Experience
Depends on area of study.
Master’s Thesis Plan
Students may complete the M.A. degree by writing a Master’s Thesis relevant to their chosen area of study. The M.A. thesis should be submitted at the end of the second year, but no later than Spring Quarter of the third year. Students must enroll in Chicana/o Studies 598 (M.A Thesis Research) under the guidance of the faculty advisor. The thesis committee consisting of the student’s faculty advisor, another ladder-ranked faculty form the list of core or jointly-appointed faculty in the department, and an outside reader must be appointed by the department no later than Fall Quarter of the student’s second year. The thesis is evaluated on a pass/no pass basis.
Master’s Examination Plan
Students may choose to take a comprehensive examination that consists of a series of essay questions designed to demonstrate the student’s knowledge of theories and methods in the field of Chicana/o Studies, and their ability to apply these ideas to their chosen area of study. Students may enroll in Chicana/o Studies 597 (examination preparation) while preparing for the examination. The examination is developed and administered by the student’s faculty advisor, and evaluated by the advisor and either the department Chair or Vice Chair for graduate studies and/or another faculty of the department. The M.A. examinations are evaluated on a pass/no pass basis.
Time-to-degree
Full-time students are expected to complete the requirements for the master’s degree within two years (six quarters) of registration.
Advising
Each entering student is assigned to the Vice Chair for Graduate Studies, who takes primary responsibility for academic advising in the first year. A permanent faculty advisor is selected in the second year. After completing coursework for the Ph.D., but before taking the University Oral Qualifying Examination, the student submits a four-person doctoral committee that requires approval of the department’s Graduate Committee and appointment by the Graduate Division. The doctoral committee is responsible for supervision, review, and approval of the doctoral dissertation. The student affairs officer provides assistance with policy and procedure.
Major Fields or Subdisciplines
At the doctoral level, students are expected to specialize in two areas of study from among the following: 1) Border and transnational studies; 2) Expressive arts; 3) History, culture, and language of the Americas; and 4) Labor, law, and policy studies.
Foreign Language Requirement
The completion of a Ph.D. in Chicana and Chicano Studies requires, at minimum, reading fluency in Spanish. Students may satisfy the language requirement in one of the following ways: 1) satisfactory completion of two years of coursework at the University level; or 2) passing a language proficiency examination deemed appropriate by the department. The foreign language requirement is typically completed in the first year of graduate study, but must be completed before the University Oral Qualifying Examination and advancement to candidacy.
Course Requirements
Competency in the two areas of study is expected by the time coursework for the Ph.D. is completed.
Plan A
For students under Plan A, who have completed all the course requirements described above only 16 units (generally four courses) will be required for the Ph.D. These 16 units are to be completed in the second area of study as follows:
One graduate methodology course related to the second area of study
Three seminars in the second area of study, one of which may be taken outside the department.
Plan B
Students entering the Ph.D. program with an approved M.A. are expected to take a minimum of 10 courses necessary for competency in two areas. These 10 minimum required courses are:
Chicana/o Studies 200 and 201 to be taken in the first year.
One graduate methodology course and three seminars, one of which may be upper division or outside the department, in the first area of study.
One graduate methodology course and three seminars, one of which may be outside the department, in the second area of study.
Four units of Chicana/o Studies 597 (Preparation for Qualifying Exams) or Chicana/o Studies 599 (doctoral dissertation research)
Teaching assistants may enroll in Chicana/o Studies 495 when they receive their first teaching appointment and must enroll in Chicana/o Studies 375 each quarter in which they hold a teaching appointment. Neither of these courses may be counted toward the degree requirements.
The minimum course load is 12 units per quarter. Students must be continuously registered and enrolled unless they are on an approved leave of absence.
Teaching Experience
All doctoral students are expected to fulfill at least one year of teaching experience as teaching assistants in the department.
Written and Oral Qualifying Examinations
Academic Senate regulations require all doctoral students to complete and pass University written and oral qualifying examinations prior to doctoral advancement to candidacy. Also, under Senate regulations the University oral qualifying examination is open only to the student and appointed members of the doctoral committee. In addition to University requirements, some graduate programs have other pre-candidacy examination requirements. What follows in this section is how students are required to fulfill all of these requirements for this doctoral program.
The Written Qualifying Examination is a two-part exam based on the Department Reading List. Part one covers the student’s general knowledge of the history of the field of Chicana/o Studies. Part two covers the student’s two chosen areas of study and the texts from the DRL that pertain to these areas. In consultation with their faculty advisors, students will select 25 texts from each area of study on which to base their exams. Students may enroll in up to 8 units of Chicana/o Studies 597 (examination preparation) to help prepare for the exam. Students who fail either part of the written qualifying examination may retake it once without petition, as early as the following quarter. Students who fail the written qualifying examination a second time will not advance to doctoral candidacy and will be dismissed from the Program.
The University Oral Qualifying Examination is required after completion of the Written Qualifying Examination, completion of the dissertation proposal, and appointment of a doctoral committee in accord with University regulations. The four-member doctoral committee is responsible for administering the examination. The oral examination is approximately two hours in length and is focused on the student’s dissertation proposal. At the discretion of the student, this exam may be open to members of the general public.
Advancement to Candidacy
Students are advanced to candidacy and awarded the Candidate in Philosophy degree (C.Phil.) upon successful completion of the written and oral qualifying examinations.
Doctoral Dissertation
Every doctoral degree program requires the completion of an approved dissertation that demonstrates the student’s ability to perform original, independent research and constitutes a distinct contribution to knowledge in the student’s principal fields of study.
Final Oral Examination (Defense of Dissertation)
No public defense of the dissertation is required, but the doctoral committee, in conjunction with the student, may opt to voluntarily hold a defense of the dissertation.
Time-to-Degree
Full-time graduate students should normally complete the requirements for the Ph.D. degree within five years of completion of the requirements for the master’s degree, with the total time from admission to graduate status until completion of the Ph.D. being seven years.
Termination of Graduate Study and Appeal of Termination
University policy
A student who fails to meet the above requirements may be recommended for termination of graduate study. A graduate student may be disqualified from continuing in the graduate program for a variety of reasons. The most common is failure to maintain the minimum cumulative grade point average (3.00) required by the Academic Senate to remain in good standing (some programs require a higher grade point average). Other examples include failure of examinations, lack of timely progress toward the degree and poor performance in core courses. Probationary students (those with cumulative grade point averages below 3.00) are subject to immediate dismissal upon the recommendation of their department. University guidelines governing termination of graduate students, including the appeal procedure, are outlined in Standards and Procedures for Graduate Study at UCLA.
Special departmental or program policy
A recommendation for termination is made by the Vice Chair for Graduate Studies after a vote of the department’s faculty. Before the recommendation is sent to the Graduate Division, a student is notified in writing and given two weeks to respond in writing to the Chair. An appeal is reviewed by the department’s faculty, which makes the final departmental recommendation to the Graduate Division.
Applicable only to students admitted during the 2013-2014 academic year.
John E. Anderson School of Management
The John E. Anderson Graduate School of Management offers the Master of Science (M.S.) and Doctoral of Philosophy (Ph.D.) degrees in Management, the Master of Business Administration (M.B.A.) degree, and the Master of Financial Engineering (M.F.E.) degree. In addition, there are a number of degree programs, offered in cooperation with other graduate and professional degree programs on campus, that lead to the M.B.A. and another degree. The school also offers the Executive M.B.A. Program (EMBA) and the M.B.A. for the Fully Employed (FEMBA).
Global Executive MBA for Asia Pacific
Admission
Program Name
Management: Global Executive MBA for Asia Pacific
Address
Cornell Hall
110 Westwood Plaza, Suite D304a
Box 951481
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1481
Phone
(310) 794-6639
Leading to the degree of
M.B.A.
Admission Limited to
Spring
Deadline to apply
January 31st
GRE (General and/or Subject)
GRE: Not required
Letters of Recommendation
3
Other Requirements
In addition to the University’s minimum requirements and those listed above, all applicants are expected to submit a statement of purpose and the departmental application.
Applicants whose native language is not English should submit their TOEFL score with the application.
Applicants must have sufficient training to undertake graduate study in the chosen field, at least 10 years’ full-time work experience and current employment in a position of high-level managerial responsibility, and corporate sponsorship to participate in the program. Applicants must also satisfy the admission requirements of the National University of Singapore.
Advising
Small group information sessions are offered around the world. At these sessions faculty, staff and alumni are available to answer questions and provide information. One-on-one meetings can be arranged by contacting the program office.
Areas of Study
The emphasis is on general management training; increased competence in management specialties; management of international businesses, particularly in the Asia-Pacific region; organizational and interpersonal skills; and sophisticated understanding of the integration of businesses and their environments.
Foreign Language Requirement
None.
Course Requirements
Completion of the intensive 15-month course of study leads to two separate regular M.B.A. degrees, one awarded by UCLA and one awarded by the National University of Singapore (NUS). Each degree requires the satisfactory completion of the degree requirements at the other institution. Students complete 36 units in courses taught by UCLA faculty and 36 units in courses taught by National University of Singapore faculty.
The program consists of six terms, starting in May. Each term is composed of six weeks. The first two weeks involve the completion of reading assignments and written work that prepare students for classroom instruction that takes place in weeks three and four. Weeks five and six are spent doing projects or take-home examinations and case analyses. There are 30 contact hours per four-unit course. Students take two or three courses (for UCLA or NUS credit) per term.
| Term | Time Period | Courses Taught by UCLA Faculty | Location of Teaching |
|---|---|---|---|
| Term 1/Spring | May/June | Singapore | |
| Term 2/Fall | August | MGMT 463 (4), MGMT 464 (4), MGMT 486 (4) | Los Angeles |
| Term 3/Winter | November | MGMT 474 (4), MGMT 471A (2), MGMT 478 (2) – Electives | Shanghai |
| Term 4/Spring | February/March | MGMT 482 (4) | Bangalore |
| Term 5/Spring | May | MGMT 471B (2) MGMT 478 (2) | Singapore |
| Term 6/Fall | August | MGMT 483 (2), MGMT 478 (2), MGMT 478 (2) – Electives, MGMT 478 (2) Persuasive Communication | Los Angeles |
Teaching Experience
Not required.
Field Experience
Not required.
Comprehensive Examination Plan
Management practicum: This is a two-quarter project (MGMT 471A and MGMT 471B) that is designed to allow students to employ and enhance concepts learned in the classroom. It will deal with global strategic issues. The practicum may be an individual project or a group project consisting of three to five students. A faculty member from the John E. Anderson Graduate School of Management will supervise and assess all students’ projects to ensure that students’ work meets the academic requirements of the program.
Thesis Plan
None.
Time-to-Degree
The program must be completed within fifteen months of matriculation. All members of the class follow the same schedule.
Termination of Graduate Study and Appeal of Termination
University Policy
A student who fails to meet the above requirements may be recommended for termination of graduate study. A graduate student may be disqualified from continuing in the graduate program for a variety of reasons. The most common is failure to maintain the minimum cumulative grade point average (3.00) required by the Academic Senate to remain in good standing (some programs require a higher grade point average). Other examples include failure of examinations, lack of timely progress toward the degree and poor performance in core courses. Probationary students (those with cumulative grade point averages below 3.00) are subject to immediate dismissal upon the recommendation of their department. University guidelines governing termination of graduate students, including the appeal procedure, are outlined in Standards and Procedures for Graduate Study at UCLA.
Applicable only to students admitted during the 2013-2014 academic year.
School of Medicine
The Department of Biomathematics offers the Master of Science (M.S.) and Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) degrees in Biomathematics, and the Master of Science (M.S.) degree in Clinical Research.
Biomathematics
Admission
Program Name
Biomathematics
Address
David Geffen School of Medicine
5303 Life Sciences
Box 951766
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1766
Phone
(310) 825-5554
Leading to the degree of
M.S., Ph.D.
Admission Limited to
Consult department.
Deadline to apply
January 15th
GRE (General and/or Subject)
GRE: General and Subject
Consult department for additional information
Letters of Recommendation
3, from faculty competent to evaluate qualifications for pursuing graduate study and a creative research career; additional letters are welcomed and may be requested
Other Requirements
In addition to the University’s minimum requirements and those listed above, all applicants are expected to submit the departmental supplement, and statement of purpose.
High academic achievement in one scientific or mathematical field is required for admission. It is not necessary for an applicant to be proficient in both mathematics and biology, although some prior preparation in both fields is desirable.
Advising
The admissions and advising committees confer with incoming students about their goals and prior preparation. Students are assigned a major adviser, most likely the chair of the advising committee, and possibly additional special advisers to assist with specific aspects of training. Students meet with their adviser at least once a quarter. For students who advance to the doctoral program, doctoral committees replace the previous advisers as soon as the committee is formed. Doctoral committee membership must be approved by the advising committee chair and department before it is sent to the Graduate Division for appointment.
Assessments of progress are developed and reported to the advising committee by the student’s adviser(s) or dissertation committee on the basis of grades, research, the written comprehensive examination, and personal observations on progress and ability.
In addition to the formal advising process, all faculty are available to students for individual instruction and informal counseling.
Areas of Study
Consult the department.
Foreign Language Requirement
None.
Course Requirements
Master’s degree candidates must complete five graduate-level courses in biomathematics, three of which must be chosen from Biomathematics 201, 202, M203, 204, and 210. If any of these five courses were completed as an undergraduate, the student may petition the department to count them in fulfillment of this requirement of specific background in biomathematics; however, in accord with Academic Senate regulations, they cannot be applied toward the minimum requirements stated below for the master’s degree.
The master’s degree candidate must complete the University minimum requirement of nine (36 units) of graduate and upper division courses taken in graduate standing, five (20 units) of which must be graduate courses. No more than two 596 courses may be applied toward the required nine courses, and none may be applied toward the graduate course requirement.
Teaching Experience
Not required.
Field Experience
Not required.
Comprehensive Examination Plan
A written comprehensive examination administered by a committee consisting of at least three faculty members appointed by the chair, with approval of the advising committee chair, covers material presented in the coursework. This examination is usually given during the summer.
Thesis Plan
Every master’s degree thesis plan requires the completion of an approved thesis that demonstrates the student’s ability to perform original, independent research.
In general, students are required to follow the comprehensive examination plan. Permission to undertake a thesis plan must be given by the departmental advising committee, which must approve the thesis committee and plans for the thesis.
Time-to-Degree
Students who are well-prepared should be able to complete the degree within four full-time quarters.
Advising
The admissions and advising committees confer with incoming students about their goals and prior preparation. Students are assigned a major adviser, and possibly additional special advisers to assist with specific aspects of training. Students meet with their adviser at least once a quarter. Doctoral committees replace the previous advisers as soon as the committee is formed. Doctoral committee membership must be approved by the advising committee chair and department before it is sent to the Graduate Division for appointment.
Assessments of progress are developed and reported to the advising committee by the student’s adviser(s) or dissertation committee on the basis of grades, research, the written comprehensive examination, and personal observations on progress and ability.
In addition to the formal advising process, all faculty are available to students for individual instruction and informal counseling.
Major Fields or Subdisciplines
Students must complete the requirements for a field of special emphasis in biology. Students confer with their advisers to develop a coherent plan for biological or biomedical training that includes 24 units of upper division and graduate courses. At least 16 units of this coursework must be graduate-level. No more than four units of seminars graded on a Pass/No Pass or Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory basis may be counted toward the requirements. A letter-graded course must be completed with a grade of B or better to be counted toward the requirements. The department maintains a list of suggested coherent course sequences, including those for genetics, microbiology/immunology, molecular biology, neuroscience, organismic biology/ecology/evolution, and physiology.
Students petition the curriculum committee for approval of their biological training program. Students who enter the program with previous upper division or graduate training in biology or biomedicine may petition to reduce the 24-unit requirement. Students who hold a master’s degree in a biological science are expected to take one additional graduate course. Completion of the first two years of medical school will generally be accepted in satisfaction of the requirements.
Foreign Language Requirements
None.
Course Requirements
The following courses are required: Four of the five core methodology courses, Biomathematics 201, 202, M203, 204, and 210 plus two graduate Biomathematics courses from an approved list of electives in modeling application in biology/medicine.
Applied Mathematics . Students must complete 24 units of graduate or upper division courses in applied mathematics or statistics with a grade of B or better. Eight units may be in upper division courses.
The department maintains a list of representative courses in engineering, mathematics, physics, theoretical computer science, and theoretical or computational statistics that are relevant to biomathematics. Students confer with their advisers to develop a coherent plan appropriate to their research area and to petition the curriculum committee for approval of courses not already listed. Students who enter with considerable preparation in applied mathematics may petition to reduce the 24-unit requirement. Students who hold a master’s degree in mathematics are expected to take one additional graduate course.
Biology . No formal requirement beyond preparation for the field of major biological emphasis.
Independent Research. During the first two years students are required to take at least four units of Biomathematics 596 with a member of the department or a mentor from an affiliated training program. As students progress through the program, there is an increasing emphasis on research and encouragement to publish. Failure to advance in capacity for independent, creative research is a primary indication for recommended withdrawal from the program.
The following courses are recommended:
Mathematics . By individual study or coursework, students should have strength, at the upper division level, in linear algebra, differential equations, probability and statistics, and real and complex analysis. Offerings in the Department of Mathematics are especially recommended.
Statistics . Additional training in biostatistics is highly recommended.
Computer Methods . Students should be proficient in Matlab, Latex, and a lower level programming language such as C or Fortran and be acquainted with numerical methods needed for their area of research. The numerical analysis sequence in the Department of Mathematics or supervised independent study is suggested.
Biology and Biological Chemistry . A broad background is expected, from molecular to organ-system levels. This probably will be provided in requirements for the field of major biological emphasis; supplemental coursework is advised, if needed.
Teaching Experience
One teaching preceptorship (Biomathematics 596) is required. Students participate fully in the planning and delivery of one course in Biomathematics or a related subject. The emphasis is on training in all aspects of preparing for and offering a course; this is not a service-oriented teaching assistantship.
The preceptorship requirement can also be satisfied through service as a teaching assistant for two quarters at UCLA or by presenting a course in excess of 10 hours that covers recommended skills for graduate students in scientific computing (e.g., Matlab, Latex, and a lower level programming language).
Written and Oral Qualifying Examinations
Academic Senate regulations require all doctoral students to complete and pass University written and oral qualifying examinations prior to doctoral advancement to candidacy. Also, under Senate regulations the University oral qualifying examination is open only to the student and appointed members of the doctoral committee. In addition to University requirements, some graduate programs have other pre-candidacy examination requirements. What follows in this section is how students are required to fulfill all of these requirements for this doctoral program.
In the summer the department offers written qualifying examinations to test competence in biomathematics in core methodology and the electives in modeling applications. No written qualifying examination is required in the field of major biological emphasis. Full-time students must take these examinations by the end of two academic years of study and part-time students by the end of three years. The brochure, Policies for the Written Comprehensive Examinations for the Doctorate in Biomathematics, is available from the department.
The required coursework and the written qualifying examinations must be successfully completed before students proceed to the University Oral Qualifying Examination. In exceptional cases a student who has completed all required courses except for the requirements in either the field of special emphasis in biology or in applied mathematics may petition the curriculum committee to take the University Oral Qualifying Examination. Compelling evidence must be presented to the committee to demonstrate that there has been substantial progress towards completion of these requirements and that the choice of subject matter or methodological training that would complete the requirements strongly depends on the direction the proposed research eventually takes. If the petition is approved, the curriculum committee formally reduces the 24-unit requirement, but only with the clear understanding of the student and the doctoral committee that the remaining training will be completed as an integral part of the dissertation research.
The University Oral Qualifying Examination, administered by the doctoral committee appointed by the Graduate Division, critically probes the quality, scope, and feasibility of the student’s proposed dissertation work. The examination also explores the strength and integration of the student’s biomathematical, mathematical, and biological research knowledge in the intended area of research.
Advancement to Candidacy
Students are advanced to candidacy upon successful completion of the written and oral qualifying examinations
Doctoral Dissertation
Every doctoral degree program requires the completion of an approved dissertation that demonstrates the student’s ability to perform original, independent research and constitutes a distinct contribution to knowledge in the principal field of study.
Final Oral Examination (Defense of Dissertation)
Required for all students in the program.
Time-to-Degree
Full-time students with no deficiencies upon admission and sufficient prior upper division training in biology and mathematics should be able to complete the program in five years (15 academic quarters plus research and/or individual instruction during the summers). Such students complete the departmental written qualifying (comprehensive) examinations at the end of the second year, identify their research field and mentor by the end of Fall Quarter in their third year, and complete all formal course requirements by the beginning of the fourth year.
Termination of Graduate Study and Appeal of Termination
University Policy
A student who fails to meet the above requirements may be recommended for termination of graduate study. A graduate student may be disqualified from continuing in the graduate program for a variety of reasons. The most common is failure to maintain the minimum cumulative grade point average (3.00) required by the Academic Senate to remain in good standing (some programs require a higher grade point average). Other examples include failure of examinations, lack of timely progress toward the degree and poor performance in core courses. Probationary students (those with cumulative grade point averages below 3.00) are subject to immediate dismissal upon the recommendation of their department. University guidelines governing termination of graduate students, including the appeal procedure, are outlined in Standards and Procedures for Graduate Study at UCLA.
Special Departmental or Program Policy
A student may appeal a recommendation for termination from the advisory committee to the departmental chair within two weeks of being notified by the committee. The chair then initiates a faculty review of the recommendation. Factors considered in the review are biomathematical research aptitude, progress toward completion of degree requirements, performance on the required examinations, and course grades.
Applicable only to students admitted during the 2013-2014 academic year.
School of the Arts and Architecture
The Department of World Arts and Cultures/Dance offers the Master of Fine Arts (M.F.A.) degree in Dance and the Master of Arts (M.A.) and Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) degrees in Culture and Performance.
Culture and Performance
Admission
Program Name
Culture and Performance
Address
Glorya Kaufman Hall
120 Westwood Plaza, Suite 150
Box 951608
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1608
Phone
(310) 825-8537
Leading to the degree of
M.A., Ph.D.
Admission Limited to
Fall
Exceptions only in special cases.
Deadline to apply
November 1st
GRE (General and/or Subject)
GRE: General
Letters of Recommendation
3
Other Requirements
In addition to the University’s minimum requirements and those listed above, all applicants are expected to submit
M.A.: Statement of purpose and a research or term paper, as well as evidence of other creative work relevant to the degree program.
Ph.D.: A statement of purpose and a master’s thesis or substantial research paper, as well as evidence of other creative work relevant to the degree program. Applicants are normally expected to hold a master’s degree or its equivalent from a recognized college or university.
Advising
Each entering student is assigned a temporary academic adviser, from among the ladder faculty of the department, who takes primary responsibility for academic advising. Each student is expected to form an advisory committee and apply for advancement to candidacy no later than Fall Quarter of the second year. The departmental graduate adviser is fundamentally responsible for advising students in regard to program requirements, policies, and University regulations.
Areas of Study
Students designate a major field of study, to be determine in consultation with their faculty adviser. The major field consists of at least three courses. The faculty strongly advises that one of these fields should be a course that provides introduction to the special methods or discourse of the major field (whether in this department, i.e., ethnography, or in another department). Examples of some possible fields of study include dance studies, folklore, curatorial studies, arts and activism, or field studies in African, Caribbean, or Native American cultures, among others.
Foreign Language Requirement
Students must demonstrate reading competence in one foreign language. The purpose of the language requirement is to ensure that students have the necessary skills to conduct independent research. Any foreign language useful for field study and/or library research is acceptable. The language requirement must be completed before students file the advancement to candidacy petition for the degree.
The language requirement may be met by: (1) passing a departmental examination, administered by the department’s Graduate Foreign Language Examination Committee; (2) demonstrating the equivalent of five quarters or four semesters of training in an approved foreign language, completed within the last five years before admission with a grade of B or higher in the final courses; (3) placing at level six on the Foreign Language Placement Examination; or (4) petitioning to use English as a foreign language (only for international students whose native language is not English).
Course Requirements
Students must successfully complete a total of 36 units (normally nine courses) taken for a letter grade and with a minimum 3.0 grade-point average. Of the 36 units, at least 24 must be completed at the graduate level. The required courses are distributed as follows:
(1) Four core courses, taken during the first year of study; World Arts and Cultures 200, 201, 202, and 204.
(2) Three courses in the designated major field, chosen in consultation with the student’s academic adviser.
(3) Two elective courses.
Of the combined three major field and two elective courses, at least three of the five courses must be graduate level courses taken within the department.
No more than two 500-series independent study courses (e.g., World Arts and Cultures 596A) may be applied toward the graduate course requirement.
The minimum course load is 12 units per quarter. Students must be registered and enrolled at all times unless they are on an official leave of absence.
Teaching Experience
Teaching experience is encouraged but not required.
Field Experience
Field experience is not required but is expected of students whose theses are based on ethnographic research.
Comprehensive Examination Plan
Students who select this plan take a comprehensive examination that consists of a series of essay questions. This examination is designed to test the student’s knowledge of theories and methods in the study of performance and expressive culture, and their ability to apply these ideas and techniques to the study of particular traditions, genres, geo-cultural areas, social groups, or historical periods. The examination is administered and evaluated by the student’s advisory committee, which consists of no fewer than three and no more than five members, a majority of whom must be ladder faculty in the department. Students are expected to demonstrate competence in their designated major fields.
The master’s comprehensive examination is graded: (1) Fail; (2) Pass with awarding of the master’s degree; or (3) Pass with awarding of the master’s degree and recommendation to proceed to the doctoral program. If it is recommended that the student continue to the doctoral program, departmental faculty make the final determination regarding admission to the doctoral program at the next meeting of the faculty. Students who fail the comprehensive examination are allowed to retake it once, no later than the following quarter. In general, master’s degree students who seek to apply to the doctoral program in Culture and Performance are advised to select the comprehensive examination plan as preparation for their doctoral studies.
Thesis Plan
Every master’s degree thesis plan requires the completion of an approved thesis that demonstrates the student’s ability to perform original, independent research.
The purpose of the master’s thesis is to demonstrate a student’s ability to conduct research in the areas of performance and expressive culture, to interpret the results, to demonstrate the relevance of the work to conceptual and practical issues in selected disciplines, and to present the findings in lucid prose. Students who pursue this plan must submit an acceptable thesis, prepared under the direction of their academic adviser and thesis committee. The thesis committee must be appointed no later than Fall Quarter of the student’s second year.
Upon successful completion of the thesis, the committee members may recommend that the student be allowed to proceed to the doctoral program. If it is recommended that the student continue to the doctoral program, departmental ladder faculty make the final determination.
Time-to-Degree
The master’s degree is designed as a two-year program. Normal progress toward the degree is as follows:
Core course requirements — expected time of completion: end of third quarter.
Thesis committee — expected time of nomination: fourth quarter.
Language requirement — expected time of completion: before advancement to candidacy petition is filed.
Advancement to candidacy — expected time of completion: fourth quarter.
Advising
The Ph.D. degree is organized around the relationship between the individual student, the student’s adviser, and the doctoral committee. Each entering student is assigned a temporary academic adviser, from among the ladder faculty of the department, who takes primary responsibility for academic advising. Each student is expected to choose a dissertation adviser and form an advisory committee during the first year of academic residence. The departmental graduate adviser is fundamentally responsible for advising students in regard to program requirements, policies, and University regulations.
Major Fields or Subdisciplines
Students designate a major field of study, to be determined in consultation with their faculty adviser. The major field consists of at least four courses. The faculty strongly advises that one of these fields should be a course that provides introduction to the special methods or discourse of the major field (whether in this department, i.e., ethnography, or in another department). Examples of some possible fields of study include dance studies, folklore, museology, or field studies in African, Caribbean, or Native American cultures, among others.
Foreign Language Requirement
Students must demonstrate reading competence in one foreign language. The purpose of the language requirement is to ensure that students have the necessary skills to conduct independent research. Any foreign language useful for field study and/or library research is acceptable. The language requirement must be completed no later than the end of the fifth quarter of residence.
The language requirement may be met by: (1) passing a departmental examination, administered by the department’s Graduate Foreign Language Examination Committee; (2) demonstrating the equivalent of five quarters or four semesters of training in an approved foreign language, completed within the last five years before admission with a grade of B or higher in the final courses; (3) placing at level six on the Foreign Language Placement Examination; or (4) petitioning to use English as a foreign language (only for international students whose native language is not English). If the student has already fulfilled this requirement as a master’s student in this department, this fulfillment also counts as fulfillment of the language requirement for the doctoral degree.
Course Requirements
All students must successfully complete a total of 48 units (normally 12 courses) taken for a letter grade, with a minimum 3.0 grade-point average. These courses are chosen in consultation with the student’s academic adviser. The required courses are distributed as follows:
(1) Four core courses, taken during the first year of study; World Arts and Cultures 200, 201, 202, and 204.
(2) Four courses in the designated major field, chosen in consultation with the student’s academic adviser. It is strongly recommended that one of these courses be a course that provides knowledge of the special methods and discourse in the major field (i.e., a course in ethnography for a student whose major field is folklore or field studies).
(3) Four elective courses.
Of the combined four major field and four elective courses, at least four of the eight courses must be graduate level courses taken within the department. It is strongly advised that students take some courses outside of the department.
No more than three 500-series independent study courses (e.g., World Arts and Cultures 596A) may be applied toward the graduate course requirement.
Students who enter the doctoral program from the department’s own master’s degree program are not required to repeat courses. Having completed the four core courses (World Arts and Cultures 200, 201, 202, and 204), three major field courses, and two electives, these students must complete a total of 32 additional units. If these students continue in the same major field, they will need to complete one additional major field course and two elective courses, and courses toward the 32 unit total, in consultation with their academic adviser. If these students choose a new major field, they will need to complete four major field courses, in consultation with their academic adviser. No more than three of the combined major field and elective courses can be at the 500-series level.
Teaching Experience
Teaching experience is encouraged but not required.
Written and Oral Qualifying Examinations
Academic Senate regulations require all doctoral students to complete and pass University written and oral qualifying examinations prior to doctoral advancement to candidacy. Also, under Senate regulations the University oral qualifying examination is open only to the student and appointed members of the doctoral committee. In addition to University requirements, some graduate programs have other pre-candidacy examination requirements. What follows in this section is how students are required to fulfill all of these requirements for this doctoral program.
The doctoral qualifying examinations are composed of a written and an oral examination. The timing of these examinations is determined in consultation with the members of the doctoral committee. Students must successfully complete all required coursework (including the core courses and foreign language requirement) before scheduling their examination, and must be registered and enrolled during the quarter in which the examination is administered. Students who fail the written or oral examinations are allowed to retake them once, no later than in the following quarter. A second failure leads to a recommendation to the Graduate Division for termination from the doctoral program.
The written qualifying examination is administered by the student’s doctoral committee. This examination takes the form of essay questions, developed in consultation with the student’s adviser and committee, and tailored to the theoretical and substantive interests of the student, and to the refinement of a dissertation topic. The written examination evaluates competence in three main areas relevant to the student’s dissertation topic: (1) theoretical concepts and problems; (2) geo-cultural and/or historical field of specialization; and (3) expressive genre(s) or media.
Examination answers are evaluated as pass or fail. If one answer is fail, the written examination receives an overall evaluation of fail. Any examination question that originally receives a fail evaluation may be retaken once. If a student fails any single question on the written examination a second time, the student has failed the written examination. A failed written examination leads to a recommendation to the Graduate Division for termination from the doctoral program.
The University Oral Qualifying Examination is primarily a defense of the dissertation proposal and is administered by the student’s doctoral committee. A pass examination evaluation cannot have more than one committee member who votes fail regardless of the size of the committee. Students may retake the oral examination once within the next quarter. If the second oral examination results in a second fail evaluation, the student has failed the oral examination. A failed oral examination leads to a recommendation to the Graduate Division for termination from the doctoral program.
Evaluation results of written and oral examinations are communicated to the student in writing within 14 days from the date of the completion of the examination. However, the doctoral committee usually informs the student of the evaluation result of the oral examination immediately upon completion of the examination.
Advancement to Candidacy
Students are advanced to candidacy upon successful completion of the written and oral qualifying examinations.
Doctoral Dissertation
Every doctoral degree program requires the completion of an approved dissertation that demonstrates the student’s ability to perform original, independent research and constitutes a distinct contribution to knowledge in the principal field of study.
Final Oral Examination (Defense of Dissertation)
Not required for all students in the program. The decision as to whether a defense is required is made by the doctoral committee.
Time-to-Degree
Expected time to degree for the doctoral degree is four years from the master’s degree (three years for students who hold the master’s degree in Culture and Performance), depending on prior academic and language preparation and the length of dissertation. Under typical circumstances, a student would complete all course requirements during the first four quarters in residence. Fall and Winter quarters of the second year would be devoted to any additional coursework, including completion of language requirements, if necessary; to the development of grant proposals; and to preparation for the qualifying examinations, typically taken no later than Spring Quarter of the second year of residency.
Normal progress (post-master’s) toward the degree is as follows:
Core course requirements (if necessary) — expected time of completion: end of third quarter
Forty-eight units of coursework (or 32 units if continuing from the M.A. degree in this department) — expected time of completion: end of fifth quarter
Completion of foreign language requirement — expected time of completion: end of fifth quarter (must be completed before the nomination of committee and the qualifying examinations)
Doctoral committee — expected time of nomination: end of fifth quarter
Written and oral qualifying examinations and advancement to candidacy — expected time of completion: sixth quarter
Final oral examination (defense of dissertation [if required]) and filing of dissertation — expected time of completion: no later than the end of the twelfth quarter (i.e., six quarters of doctoral candidacy status allowed)
Post-master’s to doctoral degree — expected time of completion: twelve quarters
Termination of Graduate Study and Appeal of Termination
University Policy
A student who fails to meet the above requirements may be recommended for termination of graduate study. A graduate student may be disqualified from continuing in the graduate program for a variety of reasons. The most common is failure to maintain the minimum cumulative grade point average (3.00) required by the Academic Senate to remain in good standing (some programs require a higher grade point average). Other examples include failure of examinations, lack of timely progress toward the degree and poor performance in core courses. Probationary students (those with cumulative grade point averages below 3.00) are subject to immediate dismissal upon the recommendation of their department. University guidelines governing termination of graduate students, including the appeal procedure, are outlined in Standards and Procedures for Graduate Study at UCLA.
Special Departmental or Program Policy
A recommendation for termination is made by the chair of the department after a vote of the department’s graduate faculty. Before the recommendation is sent to the Graduate Division, a student is notified in writing and given two weeks to respond in writing to the chair. An appeal is reviewed by the department’s graduate faculty, which makes the final departmental recommendation to the Graduate Division.
Applicable only to students admitted during the 2013-2014 academic year.
College of Letters and Science
The Department of Classics offers the Master of Arts (M.A.) degree in Greek, the Master of Arts (M.A.) degree in Latin, and the Master of Arts (M.A.) and Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) degrees in Classics.
Greek
Admission
Program Name
Greek
Address
100 Dodd Hall
Box 951417
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1417
Phone
(310) 206-1590
Leading to the degree of
M.A.
Classics does not admit students whose final degree objective is the master’s degree.
Admission Limited to
Fall, Winter, Spring
Deadline to apply
January 15th
GRE (General and/or Subject)
GRE: General
Letters of Recommendation
3, normally from previous instructors in Classics
Other Requirements
In addition to the University’s minimum requirements and those listed above, all applicants are expected to submit a statement of purpose and a writing sample (research paper).
Applicants are expected to hold a UCLA B.A. degree or the equivalent degree from another university, preferably with a major in Classics, Greek or Latin, and a grade-point average of at least 3.0 in the major.
Advising
All students in the M.A. programs are supervised by the department’s graduate adviser, a member of the regular departmental faculty. Students are required to consult the graduate adviser (or the department chair when the graduate adviser is unavailable) at the beginning of each quarter to plan their programs, and as needed to discuss changes in programs, and are required to notify the graduate adviser of plans for examinations. Students also should consult with the adviser about problems they are experiencing in the program. Twice during each academic year, the graduate adviser conducts a review of all graduate students at a full departmental faculty meeting. The results of the review are recorded in the departmental minutes. At the end of each academic year, the substance of the evaluation of each individual student is communicated in writing to the student by the graduate adviser within 30 days.
Areas of Study
The department offers the M.A. degree in Classics (Greek and Latin) as a preliminary to the Ph.D. degree. The program that leads to an M.A. degree in Classics is considered the first step toward the Ph.D. degree in Classics. The M.A. degree in Greek may be awarded to students whose academic goals shift during the course of graduate study.
Foreign Language Requirement
In addition to taking courses in Greek, students must demonstrate proficiency in German, French, or Italian, either by passing German 5, French 5, or Italian 5 at UCLA (or an equivalent course) with a minimum grade of B, or by passing a one-hour written translation examination administered by the department.
Course Requirements
The courses presented for the Classics M.A. degree must include (1) four units of Classics 287, (2) Greek or Latin 210, (3) two courses from Greek 200A-200B-200C and two courses from Latin 200A-200B-200C, and (4) three four-unit graduate seminars (two-unit seminars may not be counted). Students must receive a grade of B or better in each of the above courses. Students presenting (1) Classics 287, (2) Greek 210, and (3) two courses from Greek 200A-200B-200C may apply for a Greek M.A. degree. The four-unit 200A-200B-200C courses test the appropriate part of the departmental reading lists. The remaining courses are to be selected in consultation with the graduate adviser. No 500-series courses may be applied toward the requirements for the M.A. degree. No 500-series courses may be applied toward the requirements for the M.A. degree.
Teaching Experience
Consult the department.
Field Experience
Not required.
Comprehensive Examination Plan
The department follows the comprehensive examination plan. Students take an examination in each of the two courses from Greek 200A-200B-200C and each of the two courses from Latin 200A-200B-200C that are required for the M.A. degree. Students must earn a grade of B+ or better on each of these four examinations in order qualify for a terminal M.A. degree or to be admitted to the Ph.D. program. Students who elect to receive an M.A. degree in Greek take an examination in all three of Greek 200A-200B-200C, and must earn a grade of B+ or better on each of these examinations.
Essay Requirement
As part of the requirements for this plan, students also submit a revised seminar paper in Winter Quarter of their second year. A student must receive a grade of at least A- on this paper in order to qualify for a terminal M.A. degree or to be admitted to the Ph.D. program. In consultation with a faculty mentor, the student revises a paper previously submitted in a seminar in the M.A. program. A committee of two faculty members evaluates the revised paper. Shortly after submitting this paper in Winter or Spring Quarter of the second year, the student presents it at a departmental seminar and leads discussion on relevant bibliography agreed upon with the faculty mentor. Students who elect to receive an M.A. degree in Greek also must satisfy the essay requirement.
Thesis Plan
None.
Time-to-Degree
Adequately prepared students taking a normal course load of three courses per quarter are expected to complete the M.A. degree in six quarters. Entering students whose initial level of preparation is not fully adequate will be allowed one or two quarters to remedy deficiencies before beginning the regular M.A. program. Students serving as teaching assistants (normally not in the first year of study) are permitted to count the required course 375 as one of the three courses constituting the normal load per quarter.
Termination of Graduate Study and Appeal of Termination
University Policy
A student who fails to meet the above requirements may be recommended for termination of graduate study. A graduate student may be disqualified from continuing in the graduate program for a variety of reasons. The most common is failure to maintain the minimum cumulative grade point average (3.00) required by the Academic Senate to remain in good standing (some programs require a higher grade point average). Other examples include failure of examinations, lack of timely progress toward the degree and poor performance in core courses. Probationary students (those with cumulative grade point averages below 3.00) are subject to immediate dismissal upon the recommendation of their department. University guidelines governing termination of graduate students, including the appeal procedure, are outlined in Standards and Procedures for Graduate Study at UCLA.
Special Departmental or Program Policy
A student may be recommended for termination for failure to correct deficiencies in performance the term following notification of these deficiencies by the graduate adviser. A student may appeal a recommendation for termination by the graduate adviser to the departmental faculty.