HDFSPHD - Human Development and Family Science
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Core Coursework Requirements
At least 49 units (not including dissertation) in the major area and 9 units in the minor area, including any eligible transfer courses approved by the major or minor department. At least half of these credit units must be in courses for which ABC grades are given, with a minimum of 12 units of regular grades taken at The University of Arizona (note that this refers to 50% of the total units listed on the Doctoral Plan of Study). Students may take any courses they wish beyond those on the Plan of Study without regard to grading format.
18 units of earned dissertation credit.
Required units must be at the 500-level or above at The University of Arizona, with the following exception: The Graduate College will allow up to 6 units of 400-level work toward the Ph.D., but only if those units were not used toward undergraduate degree requirements.
A minimum of 30 units must be taken at the University of Arizona (the total includes the 18 required dissertation units); a minimum of 12 units of regularly graded coursework must be taken at the University of Arizona.
course: Orientation for HDFS Graduate Students (1)
course: Career Planning and the PhD Job Market (3)
course: Foundations of Family and Interpersonal Theory (3)
course: Theories of Human Development (3)
course: Research Methods in Family Studies and Human Development (3)
course: Independent Study for Comprehensive Examination (6)
course: Dissertation (18)
course: Research (3)
Quantitative Analysis/Additional Research Methods (4 courses/12 units)
course: Statistical Methods in Education (4)
course: Statistics Fundamentals (4)
course: Introductory Graduate Statistics (3)
course: Statistical Interference for the Social Sciences (3)
course: Selected Applications of Statistical Methods (4)
course: Intermediate Quantitative Analysis (3)
course: Statistical Methods in Psychological Research (3) and course: Statistical Model for Psychological Research (1)
course: Special Topics in Biological Anthropology (1-3)
course:Multivariate Methods in Educational Research (3)
course: Advanced Data Analysis: Multilevel Modeling (3)
course: Advanced Data Analysis: Structural Equation Modeling (3)
course: Educational Tests & Measurement (3)
HDFS 535: Mixed Methods in Social & Behavioral Research (3) - course in development
Topics in Core Areas of Human Development & Family Science (3 courses/9 units)
course: Understanding Suicide: Prevention, Intervention, Families & Communities (3)
course: Young Adulthood (3)
course: Latinx Youth and Families (3)
course: Child & Family Policy (3)
HDFS 620: Program Evaluation (3) - course in development
Research (6 units with primary professor)
course: Thesis Research units (6 units)
See required coursework above
Requirements for the Ph.D. degree include the completion of:
A Master’s degree with an empirical master’s thesis .
A pre-candidacy meeting during which faculty considers the student’s suitability for continuation in the Ph.D. program.
Written and oral comprehensive examinations covering the major and minor emphasis areas of study.
A dissertation.
Ph.D. Minor
All PhD students are required to complete a Minor area of study. Students may choose one of the following two ways to meet the minor area requirements:
External Minor:
In consultation with their minor area advisor(s), students will take 9—12 graduate units of minor coursework as required/approved by the minor department/program (e.g., Sociology, Communication, Marketing, Psychology, Anthropology, Women’s Studies), all of which may be transfer units from prior graduate study. The rules governing the external minor, including the minor written comprehensive exam, are determined by the minor department/program. The minor area advisor must also participate in the student’s oral comprehensive exam.
FCS Thematic Minor:
In consultation with the minor area advisor(s), students may construct a thematic minor that includes 9- 12 graduate units. The FCS Thematic Minor is an appropriate option when the minor is a subarea of the major and will include some HDFS classes. Students who pursue an FCS Thematic Minor in Statistics (our “in-house” Statistics Minor) are permitted to apply their 5th stats/methods course taken in fulfillment of the major degree (the “one additional approved methods/statistics course”) toward fulfillment of their minor requirements as well. In addition, students who complete HDFS 601-607 courses in the context of an FCS Thematic Minor are permitted to apply those classes toward the fulfillment of the Topics in Core Areas of HDFS requirement as well.
Students entering with a Master’s degree have the option of doing an FCS thematic minor that includes one or more classes transferred from their Master’s program. In this case, the student is not required to have a minor advisor. Instead, their major advisor can serve in both capacities and is responsible for testing both major and minor areas of content during the Oral Comprehensive Exam.
Please refer to the Graduate Student Handbook for students who are pursuing this program of study.