UCI History Department
Requirements for the PhD in History
DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN HISTORY
Requirements for Admission. Applicants submit transcripts, three
letters of recommendation, aptitude scores from the Graduate Record Examination,
and a sample of written work. In addition, a departmental interview may be
required.
Ph.D. students are advised to begin their graduate work at UCI, since those
who have taken the M.A. elsewhere will be expected to enroll in the same courses
that are required of all incoming students, with the exception of the First-Year
Research Seminar. Subject to evaluation of their M.A. theses, these students
will be exempted from this requirement. In the second and third years, the
greater experience of those who enter with an M.A. may work to advantage in
speeding them to the qualifying examination.
To be admitted formally into the doctoral program, students must
satisfactorily pass a departmental evaluation at the end of their first year of
study; this includes students who entered with an M.A. from another institution.
Incoming students are admitted for fall quarter only, and the deadline for
application for fall admission is January 2.
Feminist Studies. A graduate emphasis in Feminist Studies also is
available. Refer to the Women's Studies section of the Catalogue for
information.
Program of Study. The Department requires doctoral students to prepare
themselves in three different areas:
1. History and Theory.
2. The first field (such as Modern Europe), which
is designed as a teaching field as well as the focus of the student's
dissertation.
3. The second field (such as American History or Critical
Theory), which is designed as a second teaching field.
The courses required in this preparation include the History and Theory
sequence, colloquium series in both fields, First-Year Proseminar/Research
Seminar sequence, and the Second-Year Research Seminar. The normal academic load
is three courses per quarter. However, applicants may be eligible for approved
part-time status, which allows students to take a lighter course load at reduced
fees for a maximum of two academic years.
Every doctoral student will be assisted by a departmental advisor in the
student's general area of study who will be responsible for approving defined
fields, guiding the student to consultant faculty, and supervising the
examination.
Language Requirements. All students, except as specified below, must
demonstrate a reading knowledge of two foreign languages prior to taking the
Ph.D. candidacy qualifying examination. Competency in a language may be
established either by passing a departmental examination or through extensive
language use in one of the research seminars. The specific languages that may be
used to satisfy this requirement depend on the student's first field.
Students in American history may use a substitute for one of their languages.
They may take either the Department's graduate course in quantitative methods or
two graduate courses in an allied discipline (e.g., critical theory, political
theory, cultural anthropology, feminist theory, art history linguistics).
Students pursuing the second option are expected to write a substantial paper
that demonstrates the value of the allied discipline to historical inquiry. The
two courses for the second option may not count toward fulfilling the
requirement for the second field.
Qualifying Examination and Dissertation. In preparation for the oral
Qualifying Examination, the student will present to the Ph.D. Candidacy
Committee a portfolio of three papers totaling at least 45 pages on subjects
related to the major field. Successful completion of this examination results in
the student's advancement to Ph.D. candidacy. Within one academic quarter of the
oral examination, new candidates must meet in a colloquy with their Doctoral
Committee to present their dissertation proposal. Once the Doctoral Committee
approves the proposal, the student begins intensive work upon the dissertation.
The research and writing involved in this effort are expected to require from
one to three years. At the end of this period an oral defense of the
dissertation normally will be held, focusing on the adequacy of the student's
research and thesis.
Students who enter with normal academic preparation and pursue a full-time
program of study should be able to earn the Ph.D. degree within seven years.