(Redirected from Ph.D. degree):''"Ph.D." redirects here, for other uses see
Ph.D. (disambiguation).''
'Doctor of Philosophy', abbreviated 'Ph.D.' (
American English) or 'PhD' (
British English) for the
Latin ''Philosophiæ Doctor'', meaning "teacher of philosophy", (or, more rarely, 'D.Phil.', for the equivalent ''Doctor Philosophiæ'') is an
advanced academic degree. In the
English-speaking world it has become the most common denomination for a research
doctorate and applies to graduates in a wide array of disciplines in the
sciences and
humanities. The Ph.D. has become a
requirement for a career as a
university professor or researcher in many
fields. In addition, many Ph.D. graduates go on to careers in government departments,
NGOs, or in the private sector.
[1]
The detailed requirements for award of a Ph.D. vary throughout the world, however there are common factors. A candidate must submit a
thesis or
dissertation consisting of a suitable body of original academic research, which is in principle worthy of publication in a peer-refereed context, and must defend this work before a panel of expert examiners appointed by the university. There is usually a prescribed minimum period of study (typically two to two and a half years full time) which must take place before submission of the thesis (this requirement is usually waived for academic staff submitting a portfolio of peer-reviewed published work).
Another common requirement is that the candidate must successfully complete a certain number of advanced courses relevant to their area of specialization. In some countries (the US and
Canada, for example), most of the universities require coursework for Ph.D. degrees. In many other countries (especially those, such as the UK, which have a greater degree of specialisation at the undergraduate level) there is no such condition in general. It is not uncommon, however, for individual universities or departments to specify analogous requirements for students not already in possession of a
master's degree. Universities in the non-
English-speaking world have begun adopting similar standards to those of the
Anglophone Ph.D. for their research doctorates (see, for example,
Bologna Process).
[2]
History of the Ph.D.
European
universities in the
Middle Ages generally placed all academic disciplines outside the fields of
theology,
medicine and
law under the broad heading of "philosophy" (or "
natural philosophy" when referring to
science). The degree of Doctor of Philosophy was the most junior of the doctorates, generally granted as
honorary degrees to select and well-established scholars. In 1861,
Yale University adopted the
German practice (first introduced in the
19th century at the
Friedrich Wilhelm University in
Berlin) of granting the degree to younger students who had completed a prescribed course of study and successfully defended a thesis containing original research in science or in the humanities.
[3]
From the
United States the degree spread to
Canada in 1900, and then to the
United Kingdom in 1917.
[4] This displaced the existing Doctor of Philosophy degree in some Universities; for instance, the 'D.Phil.' (
higher doctorate in the faculty of philosophy) at the
University of St Andrews was discontinued and replaced with the Ph.D. (
research doctorate). Some UK universities such as
Oxford,
Buckingham and
Sussex (and, until a few years ago,
York) retain the D.Phil. abbreviation for their research degrees, as do some universities in
New Zealand.
Doctor of philosophy degrees across the globe
Ph.D.s are awarded under different circumstances and with different requirements in many different English-speaking countries.
Australia
Admission
Admission to a Ph.D. program within Australia and New Zealand requires the prospective student to have at least completed either a
Bachelor's Degree with an Honours component or a higher degree such as a post graduate
Master Degree by research or a
Master Degree by course work.
In most disciplines, Honours involves an extra year of study including a large research component in addition to coursework; however, in some disciplines such as engineering, law and pharmacy, Honours is automatically awarded to high achievers of the normal four-year program. To obtain a Ph.D. position, students must usually gain a First Class Honours, but may sometimes be admitted with a high Second Class Honours (known as a 2A, or Second Class Honours Division I). Alternatively, a student who fails to achieve a First or Second Class Honours may apply for a Research Masters course (usually 12-18 months) and upgrade to a PhD after the first year, pending sufficient improvement.
Funding
In
Australia, Ph.D. students are sometimes offered a scholarship to study their Ph.D. The most common of these is the Australian Postgraduate Award (APA)
scholarship, which provides a living stipend to students of approximately
AU$ 20,000 a year (tax free). Most universities also offer a similar scholarship that matches the APA amount, but are funded by the university. In recent years, with the tightening of research funding in Australia, these scholarships have become increasingly hard to obtain. In addition to the more common APA and University scholarships, Australian students also have other sources of funding in their Ph.D. These could include, but are not limited to, scholarships offered by schools, research centres and commercial enterprise. For the latter, the amount is determined between the university and the organisation, but is quite often set at the APA (Industry) rate, roughly
AU$7,000 more than the usual APA rate. Australian students are often also able to tutor undergraduate classes and do guest lectures (much like a teaching assistant in the USA) to generate income. An Australian Ph.D. scholarship is paid for a duration of 3 years, while a 6 month extension is usually possible upon citing delays out of the control of the student. Completion of a Ph.D. is results dependent, and often
students are unable to finish during the tenure of the scholarship.
PhD and Research Masters students in Australia are not charged course fees as these are paid for by the Australian Government under the Research Training Scheme. International students and Coursework Masters students must pay course fees, unless they receive a scholarship to cover them.
Canada
Admission
Admission to a Ph.D. program at a Canadian university may require completion of a
Master's degree in a related field, with sufficiently high grades and proven research ability. In many cases, a student may progress directly from an Honours
Bachelor's degree to a Ph.D. program. The student usually submits an application package including a research proposal, letters of reference, transcripts, and in some cases, a sample of the student's writing. A common criterion for prospective Ph.D students is the comprehensive or qualifying examination, a process that often commences in the second year of a graduate program. Generally, successful completion of the qualifying exam permits continuance in the graduate program. Formats for this examination include oral examination by the student's faculty committee (or a separate qualifying committee), or written tests designed to demonstrate the student's knowledge in a specialized area (see below).
At
English-speaking universities, students may also be required to demonstrate
English language ability, usually via an acceptable score on a standard examination (e.g Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL)). Depending on the field, the student may also be required to demonstrate ability in one or more additional language(s). Prospective students applying to French-speaking universities may also have to demonstrate at least some
English language ability.
Funding
While some students work outside the university (or at student jobs within the university), in some programs students are advised (or must agree) not to devote more than twelve hours per week to activities outside of their studies.
At some
Canadian universities, most Ph.D. students receive an award equivalent to the tuition amount for the first four years (this is sometimes called a tuition deferral or tuition waiver). Other sources of funding include
teaching assistantships and research assistantships; experience as a teaching assistant is encouraged but not requisite in many programs. Some programs may require all Ph.D. candidates to teach, which may be done under the supervision of their supervisor or regular faculty.
Besides these sources of funding, there are also various competitive scholarships, bursaries, and awards available, such as those offered by the federal government via
NSERC,
CIHR, or
SSHRC.
Requirements for completion
In general, the first two years of study are devoted to completion of coursework and the
comprehensive examinations. At this stage, the student is known as a "Ph.D. student." It is usually expected that the student will have completed most of his or her required coursework by the end of this stage. Furthermore, it is usually required that by the end of eighteen to thirty-six months after the first registration, the student will have successfully completed the comprehensive exams.
Upon successful completion of the comprehensive exams, the student becomes known as a "Ph.D. candidate." From this stage on, the bulk of the student's time will be devoted to his or her own research, culminating in the completion of a Ph.D. "thesis," or "dissertation." The final requirement is an oral thesis defence open to the public.
At most Canadian universities, the time needed to complete a Ph.D. typically ranges from four to six years. It is, however, not uncommon for students to be unable to complete all the requirements within six years, particularly given that funding packages often support students for only two to four years; many departments will allow program extensions at the discretion of the thesis supervisor and/or department chair. Alternate arrangements exist whereby a student is allowed to let their registration in the program lapse at the end of six years and re-register once the thesis is completed in draft form. The general rule is that graduate students are obligated to pay tuition until the initial thesis submission has been received by the thesis office. In other words, if a Ph.D. student defers or delays the initial submission of their thesis they remain obligated to pay fees until such time that the thesis has been received in good standing.
Germany
Admission
In
Germany a
Master,
Diploma,
Magister or
Staatsexamen (state examination) degree is usually required to gain admission to a doctoral program. Sometimes good grades or a degree in a related field are additional requirements. The candidate must also find a tenured professor to serve as the formal advisor on the
Dissertation throughout the doctoral program. This advisor is informally termed
Doktorvater ('father of the doctor', for a male professor) or
Doktormutter ('mother of the doctor', for a female professor).
History
In early university history the Doctorate was awarded as a first degree. It has since evolved into a research degree.
In
German-speaking countries, most Eastern European countries, the former
Soviet Union, most parts of
Africa,
Asia, and many
Spanish-speaking countries the corresponding degree is simply called "Doctor" and is distinguished by subject area with a
Latin suffix (e.g. "Dr.med." — doctor medicinæ — which is not equal to an M.D., "Dr.rer.nat" — doctor rerum naturalium (Doctor of Science), "Dr. phil." — doctor philosophiæ etc.).
United Kingdom
Admission
In principle, a university is free to admit anyone to a Ph.D. programme; however, in practice, admission is usually conditional on the prospective student having successfully completed an undergraduate degree with at least upper second class honours, or a postgraduate master's degree.
Funding
In the
UK, funding for Ph.D. students is often provided by government-funded
Research Councils or the
ESF. The funding usually takes the form of a
tax-free bursary which consists of
tuition fees together with a
stipend of around
GBP 12,600 per year for three years (rising to £14,300 per year in London), whether or not the degree continues for longer. Research Council funding is typically allocated to an academic department which then allocate it to students, although restrictions as to the minimum acceptable qualifications are normally specified. These minimum requirements are typically a first degree with upper second class honours, although successful completion of a postgraduate master's degree is usually counted as raising the class of the first degree by one division for these purposes. However, the availability of funding in many disciplines (especially humanities, social studies, and pure science subjects) means that in practice only those with the best research proposals, references and backgrounds are likely to be awarded a studentship. The ESRC (Economic and Social Science Research Council) explicitly state that a 2.1 minimum (or 2.2 plus additional masters degree) is required - no additional marks are given for students with a first class honours or a distinction at masters level.
Many students who are not in receipt of external funding may choose to undertake the degree part time, thus reducing the tuition fees, as well as creating free time in which to earn money for subsistence.
Students may also take part in tutoring, work as research assistants, or (occasionally) deliver lectures, at a rate of typically £15-20 per hour, either to supplement existing income or as a sole means of funding.
Completion
Funding usually lasts for three years full-time (this period is usually extended pro rata for part-time students) and the thesis must usually be submitted within seven years. Since the early
1990s, the
UK funding councils have adopted a policy of penalising the departments of students who fail to submit their theses in four years (or equivalent) by reducing the number of funded places in subsequent years.
Other doctorates
In the
United Kingdom Ph.D.s are distinct from other doctorates, most notably the
higher doctorates such as
D.Litt. (Doctor of Letters) or
D.Sc. (Doctor of Science), which are granted on the recommendation of a committee of examiners on the basis of a substantial portfolio of submitted (and usually published) research.
Recent years have seen the introduction of ''vocational'' doctorates, most notably in the fields of engineering (Eng. D.), education (Ed. D.), clinical psychology (D. Clin. Psychol.) and business administration (D.B.A.). These typically have a more formal taught component, as well as a research component roughly equivalent to that of a Ph.D. This research component typically takes the form of a portfolio of two or three smaller research studies, rather than a single dissertation focusing on one larger academic project.
United States
Overview
In the
United States, the Ph.D. is the
highest academic degree awarded by universities in many fields of study. US students undergo a series of three phases in the course of their doctoral work: the first phase consists of coursework in the student's field of study and requires one to three years to complete. This often is followed by a
preliminary or comprehensive examination and/or a series of cumulative examinations where the emphasis is on breadth rather than depth of knowledge.
Another two to four years is usually required for the composition of a substantial and original contribution to human knowledge embodied in a written dissertation that in the social sciences and humanities is typically 100 to 450 pages in length. Dissertations generally consist of (i) a comprehensive literature review, (ii) an outline of methodology, and (iii) several chapters of scientific, social, historical, philosophical, or literary analysis. Typically, upon completion, the candidate undergoes an oral examination, sometimes public, by his or her supervisory committee with expertise in the given discipline.
In most research fields, a doctoral degree is required for employment. In some fields, notably the physical sciences, newly-graduated Ph.D.s are unlikely to obtain a
tenure-track post and so undertake one or more
postdoctoral positions. However, in recent years, in light of large-scale faculty
retirement in North American universities and colleges, the government believes academic employment prospects for freshly minted Ph.D. graduates may be improving.
[5] Other studies have found that there is an oversupply of Ph.D. graduates in some science and engineering fields and that graduates have a difficult time finding satisfactory positions in industry and academia.
[6] This is supported by studies that have shown that both the length and number of temporary postdoctoral positions have been increasing
[7]. This is also supported by the Bureau of Labor Statistics which finds that many of the academic jobs becoming available for Ph.D.s are part time.
The Ph.D. is often misunderstood to be synonymous with the term "
doctorate". While the Ph.D. is the most common doctorate, the term "doctorate" can refer to any number of doctoral degrees in the United States. The
U.S. Department of Education and the
National Science Foundation recognize numerous doctoral degrees as "equivalent", and do not discriminate between them (e.g.,
Doctor of Arts (D.A.),
Doctor of Musical Arts (D.M.A.),
Doctor of Education (Ed. D.),
Doctor of Science (D.Sc.),
Doctor of Theology (Th. D.),
Doctor of Business Administration (D.B.A.).
:''See
Doctoral Degree in the United States''
Admission
Admission to a Ph.D. program in the United States typically requires applicants to have a Bachelor's degree in a relevant field, reasonably high grades, several letters of recommendation, relevant academic coursework, a cogent statement of interest in the field of study, and a satisfactory performance on the
Graduate Record Exam (GRE). The
general GRE is usually required; an appropriate
GRE subject test may also be required. Specific admissions criteria differ substantially according to university admissions policies and fields of study; some programs in well-regarded research universities may admit less than 5% of applicants and require an exceptional performance on the GRE along with near-perfect grades, strong support in letters of recommendation, substantial research experience, and academically sophisticated samples of their writing.
Several universities use scoring algorithms in their admissions decision. One common score is calculated by summing an applicant's GRE-Verbal and GRE-Quantitative scores, dividing by 200, then adding the cumulative GPA ''((GREv+GREq)/200)+GPA''; scores of 10 and higher are generally considered competitive. An alternate calculation is: ''((GPA
★ 200)+GREq+GREv)''.
[8][9]
Master's degree "in passing"
As applicants to many Ph.D. programs are not required to have Master's Degrees, many programs award a
M.A. or
M.S. degree "in passing" or "in course." These degrees are awarded based on graduate work, but are not "terminal" degrees because the recipient is expected to continue his or her education toward the Ph.D. Students who receive such Master's Degrees are usually required to complete a certain amount of coursework and a master's
thesis. Depending on the specific program, masters-in-passing degrees can be either mandatory or optional. Not all Ph.D. students choose to complete the additional requirements necessary for the M.A. or M.S. if such requirements are not mandated by their programs. Those students will simply obtain the Ph.D. at the end of their graduate study.
Time
Depending on the specific field of study, completion of a Ph.D. program usually takes between four and eight years of enrollment after the
Bachelor's Degree; those students who begin a Ph.D. program with a Master's Degree may complete their Ph.D. a year or two sooner.
[1] As Ph.D. programs typically lack the formal structure of undergraduate education, there are significant individual differences in the time taken to complete the degree. Many US universities have set a 10-year limit for students in Ph.D. programs, or refuse to consider graduate credit older than ten years as counting towards a Ph.D. Similarly, students may be required to re-take the comprehensive exam if they do not defend their dissertations within five years of taking it. Overall, 57% of US Ph.D. students will complete their degree within 10 years, approximately 30% will drop out or be dismissed, and the remaining 13% of students will continue on past 10 years.
[11]
Funding
Doctoral students are usually discouraged from engaging in external employment during the course of their graduate training. As a result, Ph.D. students at U.S. universities typically receive a tuition waiver and some form of annual stipend. The source and amount of funding varies from field to field and university to university. Many U.S. graduate students work as
teaching assistants or
research assistants while they are doctoral students. Graduate schools increasingly encourage their students to seek outside funding; many are supported by fellowships they obtain for themselves or by their advisors' research grants from government agencies such as the
National Science Foundation and the
National Institutes of Health. Many
Ivy League and other well-endowed universities provide funding for the entire duration of the degree program (if it is short) or for most of it.
See also
'International Ph.D. Equivalent Degrees:'
★ France:
Doctorat
★ Italy:
dottorato di ricerca
'Other Degrees:'
★
Doctorate - A general term describing a set of degrees analogous to the Ph.D.
★
Terminal degree - The highest degree awarded in a field, usually a Ph.D.
★
Graduate student - A student pursuing education past the bachelor's degree, such as Masters Degree or a Ph.D.
★
C.Phil. (also ABD) - Term, usually used unofficially, for a graduate student who has completed all Ph.D. coursework but has yet to defend his or her dissertation.
★
Kandidat - Degree awarded by USSR and post-Soviet states.
★
Licentiate - Degree awarded in various countries, including
Portugal,
Belgium, the
UK,
Germany,
Switzerland,
Sweden,
Finland,
Australia,
New Zealand, and
Poland.
Notes
1. Research Doctorate Programmes
2. Though the term "doctor of philosophy" is not generally applied by them to graduates in disciplines other than philosophy itself. These degrees, however, are sometimes colloquially identified in English as Ph.D.s.
3. See, for instance, Ralph P. Rosenberg, ''The Journal of Higher Education'', '33', 381 (1962). Available here with subscription.
4. Renate Simpson, ''How the PhD came to Britain : a century of struggle for postgraduate education''
5. Bureau of Labor Statistics - Occupational Outlook Handbook
6. Supply Exceeds Demands for PhDs in Many Science Fields, ''New York Times''
7. Universities Rely Increasingly on Postdoctoral Positions
8. [1]
9. [2]
10. Research Doctorate Programmes
11. In Humanities, 10 Years May Not Be Enough to Get a Ph.D., 'The Chronicle of Higher Education' July 27, 2007
References
★ Estelle M. Phillips and Derek S. Pugh. ''How to Get a Ph.D.: A Handbook for Students and Their Supervisors'' ISBN 0-335-20550-X.
★ MacGillivray, Alex; Potts, Gareth; Raymond, Polly. ''Secrets of Their Success'' (London: New Economics Foundation,
2002).
★ Simpson, Renate. ''How the PhD came to Britain: A century of struggle for postgraduate education'', Society for Research into Higher Education, Guildford (
1983).
External links
★
The Mathematics PhD in the United Kingdom: Notes on its History Contains information/links of more general relevance than mathematics.
★
A community portal for PhD students and PhD holders Enables scientists across disciplines to discuss and promote their research.
★
LaTeX template for writing PhD thesis